Lord of Mountains: A Novel of the Change (19 page)

BOOK: Lord of Mountains: A Novel of the Change
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Down into another swale, a spurt of soil and gravel flicking forward under the hooves, the horse and the rider as one. He looked left and right; the landscape here was deceptive, closing in and opening out suddenly into huge vistas that seemed to go on forever. Rudi…the High King…had picked this battlefield and spent months patiently drawing the enemy onto it for the possibilities, which was a sign of cool nerves and confidence. If you could surprise the enemy they could return the favor, and war was a matter of split-second chances. He’d have been a lot more uneasy personally if he hadn’t spent a lot of his youth fighting on the Great Plains west of the Red River, especially the Dakota badlands. That was tricky country too.

And running a fight is like playing four games of chess at once, only you can’t see half the pieces. Crap. I used to think this was exciting. Of course, I was young and stupid then, a hard-on with legs.

The air was still cool to chilly and fresh with recent rain; about ideal for fighting, if you had to do it. It kept the dust-pillars of units moving to engage separate too, so far, rather than merging into a single choking pall. He scanned them and judged that nobody traveling with a lot of friends was likely to come uninvited to the dance in the next twenty minutes, so he could carry on with his original plan. Balances of time and distance and numbers moved in his head beneath the surface of conscious thought.

“Signal
at speed
,” he snapped.

Mark raised the trumpet to his lips, filled his lungs and blew. Most of the horses were already reacting by the time their riders shifted in the saddle; the First Richland had come a long way since it was a collection of quarrelsome blue-bloods from the Farmer and Sheriff families of the Kickapoo Valley back in the Free Republic. They’d known what to do even then, but now they just
did
it. Beneath him Boy rocked up to his best speed, nostrils flaring as his head pumped. Ingolf moved easily with the long swooping rhythm of the big bay gelding’s gallop, a lifetime skill.

Up the other side of the swale, and the enemy saw that their prey were escaping. Raw whoops rose, a kiy-yi-yipping sound, and then the harsh eerie
Cut! Cut! Cut!
war-chant of the Church Universal and Triumphant.
He looked over his shoulder and judged distances; they were getting a burst of speed out of their horses, but it would leave them winded soon. And they didn’t have their remount strings right with them. Trade-offs, everything was trade-offs…

Now just watch the stakes
, he tried to project at his men mentally.

There was a set of four peeled withes stuck in the low rise ahead, spaced about a hundred yards apart. Totally inconsequential unless you were looking for them.

Come on, you cheeseheads, you were briefed
.

“Signal
columns of platoons
,” he barked.

The trumpet sounded again, brassy and harsh. The long formation stuttered and changed, as if the sound were playing directly on the nervous systems of men and horses; it turned from a long double line into four columns each, three men across and twenty deep. They did it without even a moment’s check to their speed, like a square-dance on horseback, and Ingolf felt an instant’s flickering glow of pride under his focus.

Over the low swelling crest, each column trampling a stake as it went. The Cutters were after them fast now, ready to plaster them with arrows and then close in with the shete, the eastern cutting-sword. Being outnumbered was a recipe for a massacre in a swarming melee fight like that, where drill and discipline counted for much less. Down into the shallow draw, up the other side and—


Left wheel!

The trumpet sounded. Ingolf peeled out of the formation as each snake of horsemen turned in its own length, the whole becoming a thicker column again. Mark was beside him. The others thundered by, and he waved sharply to Major Jaeger as he passed. The second-in-command had been promoted this summer, after his predecessor had stopped an arrow in a skirmish far east of here, but he was shaping nicely.

Then he turned in the saddle to look back where they’d come. The ground itself just on this side of the crest writhed and shook, or so it seemed. That was a thousand Mackenzie archers shedding their war-cloaks, the shaggy surfaces studded with loops holding bits of bunchgrass.
They could be hard to spot if you were walking within ten feet of them, much less riding a galloping horse a hundred yards away.

Even Mary, with proper Dúnedain Ranger loftiness, admitted that they did it
fairly well, usually.

“Get ’em, kilties!” Mark shouted enthusiastically, as the savage wail of bagpipes playing “The Ravens Pibroch” echoed, and beneath the hoarse drone sounded the thudding, booming, rattling hammer of the Lambeg drums.

Ingolf nodded grimly himself. They’d stood with arrows on the strings of their longbows, the great yellow staves of mountain yew coming up as they walked a half-dozen steps to top the crest in their three-deep harrow formation. Nobody was going to miss them now; the morning light on the arrowheads was like sun sparkling on mica in rocks, and their faces were painted for war in a riot of black and scarlet and blue and green.

By then the Cutters had realized what was happening. Some of them shot a patter of arrows, some drew their shetes to try and charge home with cold steel, and more turned to run; none of their choices did much good, except to tie the not-really-formation into an immovable mass of cursing men and rearing, neighing horses for half a hideous minute.


Let the grey geese fly!
” he heard the Mackenzie bow-captains shout. “
Wholly together—loose!”

The Clan’s warriors pulled the arrows back with that peculiar-looking half-squatting, half-leaning motion and the right hand ending back behind the angle of the jaw, as if they were standing between two trees and trying to push them down—what they called shooting
inside the bow
. Then a long snapping crackle with a whistling tone beneath it as they shot. The enemy horse were fifty yards from the bow-line, no more, about half trying to wheel and run and the other half still pushing forward. Coming to a dead stop on a single galloping horse was hard enough, doing it
en masse
without warning was a nightmare of bone-breaking collisions waiting to happen unless you’d practiced it over and over.

The heavy cloth yard shafts sleeted out, a thousand together and then two hundred a second, moving in long shallow arcs that were a blurring
flicker of deadly speed through the air, tipped with narrow punch-headed bodkin points and twirling as the curved vanes of the flight-feathers spun them. Two hundred feet a second. Half a second to the target.

None of the enemy horsemen wore more than a light mail shirt, and those were usually made of old fence wire with the rings just butted together rather than riveted. Most were in boiled leather vests with a few pieces of metal added, their shields were light round hide circles on bentwood frames, and some didn’t even have helmets. That sort of gear was about as effective as a wet wool shirt against what was going to hit them.

The sound as the bodkins struck was halfway between hail on a shake roof and hammers hitting meat in a slaughterhouse. The enemy seemed to stutter in mid-stride, and then their mass burst like a glass jar under a boot. Horses screamed, louder and more piteous than the cries of men; he could see them rearing, bucking at the intolerable pain of steel and cedarwood gouging into their bodies, going over and then more horses hitting them and tripping, bumped into each other’s paths by companions on either side, or trying to leap the sudden impassable obstacle thrashing in front of them. Men would be crushed under ton-weights of panicked writhing horseflesh, and when horses fell over at speed they
broke
.

More flights of arrows lashed down into the tangle, and more, and more. Probably half the riders had been hit in the first thirty seconds, over a hundred killed, many more wounded, and more of their mounts. A spray of the lucky or slow or timid exploded from the back of the enemy group, spurring frantically westward and not even bothering to turn and shoot over their horse’s rumps.

Ingolf winced slightly. He’d had enough experience of the Cutters, as a prisoner of theirs for starters, that he didn’t pity them even slightly. But war was always hard on the horses, who had no choice in the matter.

Some of the running men were on foot, and others were pulled up behind by comrades; once they were out of range, many of the survivors slowed enough to grab the reins of horses running loose. Here and there a banner went up again, and cowhorn trumpets blatted to rally them.

Ingolf turned Boy’s head and shifted in the saddle to send him into motion. The reins were knotted together and looped around the horn of
his saddle; you were useless as a mounted archer if you couldn’t guide your horse by balance and leg-signals alone, just as your horse was useless unless it could read those signals. He reached over his shoulder for an arrow. The Richlanders swung wide around the southern, rightward flank of the Mackenzie archers, shaking out into a double rank line again as they did.

The clansmen stopped shooting well before they’d emptied their quivers. They stood for a moment shaking their bows in the air and yelling a chant like one great voice:

We are the point—

We are the edge—

We are the wolves that Hecate fed!

We are the bow—

We are the shaft—

We are the darts that Hecate cast!

Ingolf shook his head and shivered slightly. He
liked
Mackenzies, the little he’d seen of them apart from Rudi and Edain. They were friendly to strangers—that had saved his life when he first arrived in Sutterdown with the Prophet’s assassins on his heels. And fine musicians and craftsmen and farmers and some of the best cooks he’d come across in all his travels, and they partied with childlike enthusiasm. But sometimes they could give you the heebies. It had been about this time of year when he’d gotten to Sutterdown; Samhain Eve, in the Clan’s calendar.

He could remember that, too, the eerie music and the dancers whirling through the darkened streets masked as Raven and Bear, Wolf and Elk, and the feeling of another world pressing on a veil stretched tissue-thin. Even Nantucket hadn’t been all that much weirder.

Mark was looking over his shoulder. “The Mackenzies are pulling out!” he said.

“Yeah.” Ingolf nodded.

One reason he had Mark as his signaler was so he could learn command first-hand, even young as he was. Back…not his home, not anymore, but Mark’s home, the beloved place they’d both been born and among people he still loved too…Mark was in line to be Sheriff someday.
The way things had worked out in most of the Midwest, it was the Sheriff who called out and led the Farmers and their Refugees when a district had to fight. It was a
good
idea for the Sheriff to have a real grasp of how to handle men in a fight. You hoped for peace, but in the world as it was after the Change, you couldn’t depend on it. He wanted Readstown to keep doing as well as it had under his father and then his elder brother.

“You notice how the Cutters put their dicks on the chopping block when they ran into our Mackenzie friends?”

Mark nodded, and Ingolf went on: “But that arrowstorm thing they do works best when someone’s willing to charge into the teeth of it with their fangs out and hair on fire. It’s hard for infantry to attack horsemen who refuse to engage. This particular trick wouldn’t have worked against really disciplined opposition, either, or not as well. Right, there’s the signal.”

They were well out east in front of the ridge the Mackenzies had held; the archers were simply trotting to the rear at a wolf-lope that covered ground surprisingly fast, some of them carrying wounded slung between them sitting on a bowstave, a few others carrying bodies. Northward a fierce blink of light showed, a hand-held mirror catching the sunlight.

“Now
this
is going to get complicated,” he muttered to himself. Louder: “Sound:
Advance to contact with fire and movement!

The First Richland was in line east-west now, facing north towards the shattered, retreating Cutters, who still outnumbered them. They moved up to a canter and then back to a controlled hand-gallop. He angled in towards the main guidion of the regiment, a flag of dark brown with a bright orange wedge. He went past grim-held faces under the kettle helms; they were young, but by now they all realized down in the gut you could get killed just as dead in a victorious battle as a lost one and leave your bones a very long way from home. The confused boil ahead was sorting itself out.

Yeah, the Cutters’re fighting-men, and experienced,
he thought.
They’re not drilled troops but they’re survivor types. They took a hard punch in the face but they’re getting over it.

Whoever the leaders there were, they’d gotten all the men who could ride onto horses that could run and they were pulling out fast. Arrows began to whine towards the Richlanders, fired over the rump in the way that made chasing about as dangerous as being chased in this style of fighting. They’d be planning on running north until they’d broken contact and then angling east back towards their main body. He brought his own bow up.

“Sound
shoot
!” he shouted.

To himself:
Let’s keep their attention well and truly on us.

With a grunt of effort, he pulled his shaft to the ear, thick biceps swelling as he brought his bow up to a forty-five degree angle and drew against the resistance of horn and wood and sinew and bent the stave into a deep curve. The string rolled off his gloved fingers and recoil slammed him back in the saddle.

His voice wouldn’t carry far in the rush of wind and the drumming thunder of hooves. The action did; the trumpet would, and the way the squad and platoon leaders followed suit even better. Three-hundred-odd arrows whipped up in a high arch, twinkled as they turned and plunged downward, then a steady stream as men shot and shot and shot. Not as many shafts were coming back but they were just as dangerous; here and there one banged off armor or went home in meat. Men or horses dropped out or fell, and the line rippled as the others opened out and then closed up.

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