The Cerberus Rebellion (A Griffins & Gunpowder Novel) (27 page)

BOOK: The Cerberus Rebellion (A Griffins & Gunpowder Novel)
5.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“And what are our estimates on enemy losses?” Eadric asked.

“We estimate that we inflicted similar losses in their center, but the rest of their divisions were better entrenched than expected and we think they lost around half of the numbers that we did,” William said reluctantly. “We think that their cavalry lost about half as many riders as us.”

“So you’re telling me that we lost thirty-seven thousand infantry and fifteen thousand cavalry and estimate enemy losses at only twenty-five thousand infantry and eight thousand cavalry?”

“According to our estimates, that is correct,” William said.

“How far are our next divisions of reserves?” Eadric asked as his mind tried to devise a plan to salvage the disaster that had befallen his first battle.

“The last telegraph puts two additional divisions two days away.”

“Very well,” Eadric said as he stood. “We will move our artillery closer to the enemy lines and harass them until additional forces arrive. Until that time, Richard, I want you to consolidate our divisions and reform them for battle. Let me make myself very clear, My Lords: we will defeat the enemy here, or you will answer for it to the man.”

 

Chapter 20 - Magnus

 

Magnus shook his head as he reviewed the map of the Robine Barony again. His three infantry divisions were arrayed around Kval Keep in a semi-circle. His most experienced First Division held the center, Fifth Division held his left flank, and Sixth Division anchored his right end. Six batteries of ten-pound cannons had taken up position behind the infantry and three batteries of fifteen-pound heavy artillery sat in the squat, sprawling keep.

Kval Keep had been built on a lonely hill amongst the Barony’s flat, fertile fields. The hill looked very much like a monk with its lower two-thirds covered by a thick forest, the top third clear cut and the keep right on the center. A low stone wall surrounded the entire hill, and it was behind that hill that Magnus had established his camp. Royal guards paced the thin walkways and a full company guarded both of the gatehouses. A river wound its way from behind the keep toward the coast and Robine Harbor to the south.

Across the fields of Robine, King Eadric Garrard had brought five divisions of infantry and seven batteries of field artillery. He also had nearly thirty thousand cavalry to Magnus’ fifteen, and the King’s mounted forces had significantly more battle experience than their Kerberosi counterparts. Eadric had set his battle lines on the western side of a gully that ran for miles from north to south.

The Ansgari forces had been slowed by Magnus’ skirmisher and raiding parties, but they had continued their advance into Kerberosi territory with only a single major interruption. Lord Eldon Carsten had held Eadric’s army in check for three full days at Gregory. The first day had been a sound victory; the Ansgari forces had been forced to retreat and had spent the next two days harassing the Kerberosi lines without committing to a full assault.

On the third day of battle, Eldon had ordered his end division to flank the Ansgari line but realized too late that the King had been reinforced. The Ansgari forces had swept through the disjointed Kerberosi lines and captured nearly half of the remaining soldiers. Lord Carsten had escaped with less than a third of the forces that he had been given command over and the Ansgari cavalry continued to harass him until he reached the safety of Aaberg Castle at Vidis.

The Ansgari had turned to the southeast to avoid further contact with the northern divisions of the Kerberosi Army and stab at the more fertile southern territories. Robine produced more than its share of wheat and grain and its loss would strike a devastating blow to the Kerberosi economy.

When the reports of Eadric’s change of direction had reached Agilard, Magnus had collected a division of his best infantry and rushed to Kval Keep to join with his southern forces under Lord Oskar Kvalheim. His generals had advised him to let the Barony fall and to secure more defensible positions further east. He had refused and ordered them to array their troops to hold against the Ansgari.

He was outnumbered and outgunned, but honor and duty forced him to defend the ancient home of his loyal noble. He had sent message to Lord Carsten at Vidis to bring his ragged divisions and whatever levies he could collect along the way. Messages had been sent to Hilldale to rally the three brigades of Home Guard to aid their king, but unless those troops moved swiftly, they would arrive after all of the fighting was done.


Your Grace, a messenger is crossing the field,” Alger Greenbow announced from outside of the tent flap. “He carries a peace banner and a satchel.”


I wouldn’t have expected Eadric to be so courteous,” Magnus quipped as he rolled up the map. “Join me, Algers, and have Oskar and my generals summoned as well.”


Yes, Your Grace,” Alger said and stepped away from the tent.

Magnus would have been well within his rights to claim Kval Keep for his own quarters, but he was not so arrogant as to think that he needed to stay on a feather bed every night. He felt that sleeping on a cot, under a canvas tent, kept him in touch with his soldiers, and hoped that it endeared him to them. It also allowed him some privacy, away from the keep that would be swarming with stewards, chambermaids and pages and squires running messages from one lesser lord or knight to another.

The pavilion was nearly as large as the quarters that he would have been provided in the keep. A larger central room anchored the structure. Smaller tables were placed along the front wall, and the long table and its respective chairs occupied a large portion of the tent’s rear.

Magnus’ steward cleared the table of the handful of plates and glasses that were the remains of Magnus’ breakfast. Magnus rolled the few maps that had found their way to the table and slid them into their thick leather carrying cases. Rorik took his place at Magnus’ elbow while they waited for the other members of the council.

Alger Greenbow returned from sending squires and stepped through the tent flap. Despite the growing heat, he continued to wear the furs and wool clothes of the hill tribes. Sweat beaded on his forehead and he threw off his cloak as soon as he was inside the pavilion. His cheeks were flushed from the heat and his long blond braid was matted with sweat and dirt.


This heat is going to kill you,” Magnus observed as he sipped from an iced glass of brandy.


Ah, we have summers in Hilldale,” Alger said dismissively as he took the seat at Magnus’ right hand. “I’ll live.”


I hope so,” Magnus said with a laugh. “What terms do you suppose he’ll offer?”


Probably the same that he offered to Eldon,” Alger said. He waved to Magnus’ steward and the man scurried over. “A beer, please. Cold.”


Yes, Milord.” The steward slipped out through the back of the tent.

Magnus frowned as he brooded on the terms that the King of Ansgar was likely to offer. The terms delivered to Lord Carsten had been directed mostly at the lesser lords and knights of the Kerberosi army. The offer to the nobles to allow them to take a life of exile and allow their heir to take their titles would not stand with the Kerberosi nobles. They were too proud to pass the dishonor of surrender to their descendants, as it had been passed to them.

He doubted that Eadric knew that he would be offering terms directly to Magnus’ hands, rather than to one of his nobles. Magnus wondered, for a moment, if the King had known that Magnus was in command of the defenses arrayed around Kval Keep, if he would have offered to have a summit and presented his terms directly to the leader of one of the rebellions that threatened to tear his nation apart.


Your Grace,” Oskar Kvalheim said as he stepped through the pavilion’s entrance.

At only six feet tall, Oskar was not the tallest Kerbosi noble, but he was a bull of a man with shoulders as wide as two men and arms that were larger around than some women’s waist. His pale blue eyes concealed the Kvalheim’s notorious blood lust.


Try not to send the messenger into fits, Oskar,” Magnus said with a half smile as the baron slid into seat at his left.


You know those are lies,” Oskar answered, perhaps too quickly. “I had to break one messenger’s hand before he went mad, and the other got a good shouting at.”


I see,” Magnus said as he tried to hold back a laugh.

The emissaries that had been sent by one of the Ansgari merchant houses to negotiate with Oskar for the use of his barony’s harbor had been arrogant men with no respect for the ancient houses that ruled the Kerberosi territories. They carried with them the disdain for the eastern territories that many of the central Ansgari harbored, and they had been foolish enough to reveal their feelings to Oskar. A poorly worded ultimatum and an attempt to lay hands on the baron had resulted in several broken bones and two emissaries who refused to ever travel to Kerberosi lands again.


The other generals will be here shortly,” Oskar said as he poured himself a cup of water. “I instructed them to gather final ready reports from their divisions.”


Thank you, Oskar,” Magnus said with a nod. “What is your opinion of our situation?”


Our defensive positions will be stronger than Eadric expects, but he has nearly forty thousand more infantry than we do and double our cavalry. We must not make the same mistake that Eldon made at Gregory,” Oskar said. “The King will be expecting us to try to force him back. We must bide our time and inflict as much damage to his army and its morale as we can without exposing our own weaknesses.”


If only we were closer to the coast,” Algers mused. “Our ships would be able to support our flank and there are three forts surrounding Robine Harbor.”


Yes, but Eadric marched his men on the keep, and we must defend it. A significant portion of our foodstuffs travel up the Robine River, and whoever controls the keep, controls what travels between the harbor and the rest of Kerberos,” Magnus said.


Of course, Your Grace.” Alger leaned back in his chair and accepted the beer he had requested from Magnus’ steward.

When Hagen Arntson and Elof Nyberg were finally ushered into the pavilion by Magnus’ guards, they were red faced, breathing heavily and had sweat dripping from their brows. Each of them carried satchels stuffed with readiness reports, roll calls, and, invariably, requests for supplies. Both stripped off their outer coats and threw them over a chair back. Hagen sat on the right end of the table and Elof took his place at the left end.


Gentlemen,” Magnus said when everyone was seated. “A messenger from Eadric should be shown in any minute now. I expect the terms that the offer will carry to be similar to those that he offered Lord Carsten at Gregory: exile for our nobles, ransoms for the lesser lords, and amnesty for knights and soldiers that are willing to join him. However, I doubt he expects me to be here, and we can use that to our advantage. I intend to listen to the messenger, spend a suitable amount of time discussing the terms, and then send the messenger back across the lines to tell Eadric that I am here.”


You hope that he will send new terms across for you and buy us some time?” Hagen asked.


Exactly. If we handle it properly, we can expend the whole day in sending messengers back and forth and give our reinforcements more time.”


Eadric may see what you are doing and simply attack,” Elof warned.


That is a possibility,” Magnus said. “If he chooses to attack, we will have lost nothing in the trying. We are outnumbered and our position is tenuous at best. We need to take advantage of every opportunity that presents itself to us.”

One of Rorik’s sergeants stuck his head through the tent flap and Rorik stepped over to whisper with the guard.


Your Grace, the messenger has arrived and is waiting outside.”


Very well, let him in,” Magnus said.

The guard disappeared for a moment and then pulled the flap back and stepped through it. Behind him, a well-dressed man in a rich green uniform stepped into the pavilion. This meeting would not go as planned: it was a lesser lord that Eadric had sent with his ultimatum, not some low-born messenger. The man’s eyes widened for a brief moment when he saw who he would be addressing, but he quickly pulled his emotions back under control. He walked to the center of the pavilion and stopped. He leaned heavily on a black wooden cane.


Announce yourself,” Rorik ordered.


I am Lord Tramaine Wherry, Lord of Derby Harbor,” the man said, and presented the sealed envelope to Rorik. “His Majesty, Eadric Garrard, King of Ansgar, Protector of the Realm, Rightful Liege of Kerberos and Duke of Elsdon, wishes you to consider his terms in good faith and to provide your response as quickly as possible.”


You are standing before the Rightful Liege of Kerberos,” Alger barked.


My apologies, my lord, but neither I nor my liege lord recognize the legitimacy of your rebellion against the governance that your ancestors accepted one hundred years ago,” the lesser lord answered carefully.

Here is one who has spent time at court
, Magnus thought as he considered the envelope in his hands.


Whether or not you or King Eadric recognize our right to overthrow the oppressive government that has had its boot heel on our throat is irrelevant,” Oskar said. “We do not need validation from the Ansgari rulers nor their people to proclaim our right to freedom and self-determination.”

Other books

What He Left Behind by L. A. Witt
Bronze Pen (9781439156650) by Snyder, Zilpha Keatley
American Girl On Saturn by Nikki Godwin
A Killing in China Basin by Kirk Russell
Welcome to Last Chance by Cathleen Armstrong
Alexandria Link by Steve Berry
An Artificial Night - BK 3 by Seanan McGuire
Act of Mercy by Peter Tremayne
The Oldest Sin by Ellen Hart