The Taglian Territories:
Below Lake Tanji
We overtook Sleepy in the hills beyond the north shore of Lake Tanji. Lady
hurried ahead. She knew better but could not help herself.
Runmust Singh’s rangers were still somewhere out ahead of the main force. They
were close enough for their campfires to be seen across the barrier hills but
recent hard rains had flooded the ravines and creeks between here and there.
Which was the only reason we had caught Sleepy so soon. The flooding had slowed
her down.
“It won’t be long,” she told us. “Unless we get more rain. These washes drain
fast.”
I knew. I fought the Shadowmasters across these hills, many years ago.
My wife was exasperated. She turned on Tobo, who, with his father, was renewing
acquaintances with Sahra. “When are you going to learn enough about those damned
posts so we can use them?” A little flooding would slow nobody if we could fly.
Tobo told Lady the truth, which was the last thing she wanted to hear. “It might
be months yet. Maybe even years. If we’re all so anxious to become more mobile,
why don’t we wake the Howler up and make a deal for some flying carpets?”
Debate was immediate and brisk with almost everyone feeling a need to offer an
opinion. Goblin, Doj, Lady, Tobo, Sahra, Willow Swan, Murgen, Goblin again. Even
Thai Dei looked like he had a viewpoint, though he kept it to himself.
I realized that Sleepy had not stated her opinion. In fact, her eyes had glazed
over. She was far, far away. Her intensity was disturbing.
One by one, the others fell silent. A foreboding emotional murk began to gather.
I looked for Unknown Shadows but saw nothing. What was going on?
Tobo spoke up first. “Captain? What’s the matter?” Sleepy had begun to lose
color. I got up to go find my medical kit.
Sleepy came out of it. “Tobo.” Her voice was so intense silence spread in all
directions. “Did you remember to restore the shadowgate so it won’t collapse if
Longshadow dies?”
The silence deepened. Suddenly we were holding our breaths. And staring at Tobo.
And every one of us knowing the answer even if we had not been there and did not
want it to be true.
Sleepy said, “They’ve had him in Hsien for as long as we’ve been here. He was a
frail old man. He won’t last.”
Without saying a word Tobo started getting ready to travel. Groaning, I
clambered to my feet and began getting my stuff together, too. Tobo began
telling his father and Uncle Doj how to manage the Voroshk. “You have to keep
them engaged. Keep them trying to learn. Keep them away from Goblin. You’ll need
to force-feed the sick one. I don’t think he’s going to last much longer.”
I was not sure I overheard that last remark. He spoke very softly.
He was right. The kid was slipping away. I could not stop it.
I looked hard at Lady, who had shown no sign of getting ready to do what had to
be done. I told her, “You need to come. Following Tobo you’re our best gate
mechanic.” I offered a hand.
Murgen, I noted, was paying his son’s instructions no attention. He was getting
ready to travel, too.
Lady’s expression hardened. She accepted my hand. Upright, she stared northward.
The fires in Runmust’s camp were not visible now. Rain was falling between here
and there.
Several others, including Willow Swan, quietly began getting ready to travel,
too. No names were named, no orders were given. Those who needed to go or
thought their presence would be useful began packing. Nobody grumbled. Nobody
said much of anything at all. We were all too tired to waste energy doing
anything but what had to be done.
No fingers got pointed, either. It took no genius to understand that Tobo had
been swallowed up by his own workload, with people wanting something more from
him every minute. Sleepy bore the heaviest responsibility. It was her job to see
that everything got done. She should have had a checklist. But she had been
singleminded in her desire to move faster than resistance could coagulate in
front of her.
For that she could not be faulted. The Company had seen no fighting yet, though
nearly a quarter of the Taglian empire could be accounted disarmed. It was the
most remote and lightly populated quarter but the strategy remained sound.
The wealth Sleepy had brought off the plain would let her exploit the
territories we held far more effectively than would Soulcatcher’s capacity for
generating terror allow her to exploit what she held.
Of course, if the shadowgate collapsed all that would be moot. Our world would
be in greater danger than Khatovar. Unlike the Voroshk, we could not defend
ourselves.
Tobo did not bother collecting the few bamboo fireball throwers left. If we
became desperate enough to need them that handful would not do any good.
There were eight of us. Tobo and his father, me, Lady, Willow Swan, and Thai Dei
because Murgen never got out of rock-throwing range of Tobo’s uncle. Then there
were two older-than-average hardcases from Hsien, solid veterans of the warlord
conflicts. One we knew as Panda Man because his real name sounded like that. The
other was Spook. He was Spook because he had green eyes. In Hsien demons and
haunts are supposed to have green eyes.
The Unknown Shadows refuse to conform. Every one of those haunts that I have
actually seen had the more traditional red or yellow eyes.
Many of the Unknown Shadows traveled with us. At night, under the moon when it
made its infrequent, shy appearances, the ground surrounding us seemed to be a
sea in motion. Tobo’s pets did not mind being seen just now.
Before long my two ravens rejoined me. I had seen nothing of them since shortly
after we had left the shadowgate.
Tobo told me, “I’ve sent scouts ahead. Now I’m going to ride ahead, too.” He was
mounted on Sleepy’s superhorse. “The rest of you follow me as fast as you can.”
He surged ahead. Most of the churning darkness went with him, though we retained
enough shadowy outriders that no danger would take us by surprise.
“I’m sorry,” I told Lady.
“Not your fault this time.” She was not happy, though.
“You gotten anything out of Kina yet?”
“No. Nothing but a few infrequent touches while we were up there with Sleepy.
They were pretty faint and probably just because we were close to Booboo.”
Damn. “You think we can get back to the gate in time?”
“You think Longshadow will fight for life if he knows that the only thing he can
accomplish is to save the people who pulled him down and turned him over to his
oldest enemies?”
That was not the answer I wanted to hear.
The Nether Taglian Territories:
Leaves of Misfortune
Runmust and Iqbal rode northward slowly, at a pace their whole band found
comfortable. Life would not be too hard until the Captain caught up. She would
be put out because the rangers did not meet her as soon as possible. She would
get over it.
The prisoners were given no opportunity to enjoy life, but they were not
tormented directly. The Singhs would not have allowed that even had they known
that Sleepy would not mind.
There was no formal arrangement between the Singhs and the dark spirits out of
Hsien but Unknown Shadows paced them always. Communications remained crude.
Runmust generally just got a really bad feeling when it was time to watch out.
The problem was his. A religious failing. He was allowed no congress with
demons. His innate human knack for rationalization had not yet exonerated the
Unknown Shadows from being spawn of darkness.
Runmust began to have one of those bad feelings. It grew worse fast. Iqbal’s
uneasiness said that he had been touched, too. Even some of the soldiers were
becoming troubled.
Quick hand gestures. The ranger team halted. Everyone dismounted. Scouts crept
forward while the men assigned the duty for the day began moving the prisoners
and horses into a gulch off the road.
The warriors of Hsien could be remarkly quiet and patient. Runmust admired their
skill in using the available cover in terrain, boasting only tangled, scrubby
brush, rocks and lots of gullys. He could not do what they did. Of course, he
was twice the size of the biggest and a decade older than the oldest.
Minh Bhu, one of the best, intercepted him in his slow advance, after signing
for absolute silence.
Minh brushed leaves aside and smoothed a patch of dirt. He used a forefinger to
sketch the ground ahead, indicating the approximate positions of a well-chosen
ambush site.
Runmust signaled a general withdrawal. He looked for crows or other creatures
traditionally associated with the enemy. He saw nothing. “How could they know we
were coming?” he asked when he was far back enough to whisper. “How many of them
are there?”
Minh shrugged. “We’re not going to get a head count. There are a lot more of
them than there are of us. And as for how did they know, from that hilltop you
can see all the country we crossed the last two days. They were probably just
sent out to see if this is the route north the Captain picks.” He pointed back
south. The dust and sparkle of the main force were obvious.
“Why an ambush?”
“They can see there aren’t many of us. It would look like a chance to take some
prisoners.”
“Uhm.” Runmust scanned the slope. Could he turn the tables on those people? He
wished he had developed a more intimate relationship with the Unknown Shadows.
“Iqbal. Talk to me.”
“We’re outnumbered, we should back away. There’s no reason to get in a fight. Or
even make contact. We’ve got important prisoners to protect. So let’s stay away
and wait for the Captain.”
Iqbal was a married man. He did not favor major risks.
Even so, Iqbal was right. Withdrawal was the only course that was not crazy.
Runmust asked, “What would they do if we did stroll into their trap?” He wished
he could catch a couple of them. A few questions answered would tell a lot about
enemy plans and what the other side thought was happening.
“They see Sleepy coming. They’ll pull out pretty soon.”
“Why do I keep getting more and more nervous?” Runmust knew the Unknown Shadows
wanted him to know something and he just was not hearing it.
In the hills ahead horses began screaming. Men cursed. Several dozen arrows rose
into the air, fell where the enemy evidently thought the rangers were hidden.
None of the arrows came close.
Muttering curses himself, Runmust waved his men back again. They began slipping
away. Wildly sped arrows fell all across the slope. “Idiots,” Runmust muttered.
“Recon by fire.” The Protector’s soldiers would charge any outcry. Or any other
obvious reaction. They were an opportunity to inflict disaster just waiting to
happen.
A Taglian soldier sprang up not ten feet from Runmust, barking in pain as he
swatted his ass. Runmust froze, hoping the Taglian was too preoccupied to notice
him—though now he heard other Taglians pushing through the dry brush and knew he
could not sneak off fast enough to get away untouched.
Iqbal carried a fireball launcher. He was supposed to use it as an emergency
signal, not as a weapon. It was believed to contain just one charge. It was
ancient. There was no guarantee it would work at all.
Iqbal, unseen by the man who had now spied Runmust, rotated the handgrip trigger
on that piece of bamboo.
An intense yellow ball slammed right through the Protector’s man and rattled
around in the brush behind him. In seconds a dozen fires were burning.
Runmust and Iqbal ran. No point doing anything else now.
They had almost reached the gully hiding the animals and prisoners when a random
arrow found the unprotected meat of Runmust’s right thigh. Singh flung forward
in an uncontrolled dive. His beard protected his face as he ploughed through the
brush but he left large tufts behind. He squealed with the unexpected pain.
Iqbal stopped to help.
“Get out of here!” Runmust growled. “You have Suruvhija and the children.” Which
moved Iqbal not at all.
The Taglian troops blundered down the hillside, scattered, in no order, without
discipline or thought. Officers, sergeants and men, they had no practical
experience and very little training. They had come out of the Nijha fortress
because Soulcatcher had told them they might achieve a startling triumph. But
once the situation on the ground deviated from their expectations they were
lost.
Stumbling, dragging the leg with the arrow still embedded, Runmust clung to and
leaned on Iqbal. Both men heard the exultant Taglian soldiers plunging through
the brush behind them, swiftly bringing the inevitable.
The rangers were men chosen from those who had seen prior action serving the
warlords in Hsien and who both understood Company doctrine and accepted it. They
set an ambush of their own. The Taglians came to it as though guided by
maleficent demons.
The result was a bloodbath. It was a tactical triumph for the Black Company. It
was not unalloyed by bad news. In the end, in the heat of the moment, the
rangers did fail to acknowledge doctrine. They did not fade away while the
Taglians were confused and panicky. They maintained contact in hopes of making
sure Runmust and Iqbal escaped.
The Singh brothers did survive. But when the light cavalry, flung forward by
Sleepy right after she recognized the fireball signal, arrived they found most
of the rangers wounded or dead after having been overrun. The horsemen pursued
the fleeing Taglians. They cut down most of the enemy wounded and stragglers.
Sadly, they failed to recapture the Daughter of Night.
A particularly bright Taglian officer had recognized what he had stumbled across
and got the girl moving to the rear immediately. Her grub-colored skin had given
her away.
When that day’s sun set it was a tossup which side would consider the encounter
the greater disaster. The Company had lost a huge treasure and some of its most
valuable men, at least for a while. The Taglians had endured a huge massacre
with only one sullen, if exotically beautiful, pale, dirty young woman to show
for all the deaths.