Crusade (32 page)

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Authors: James Lowder

BOOK: Crusade
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After taking the pen from Farl, Brunthar Elventree inked it again. “The archers go here, here, here, and here.” Each location to which the dalesman pointed received a blotchy triangle of ink. When the archers’ commander was done, four large groups of bowmen were interspersed along the second line of infantry.

Next, Lord Harcourt took the pen. With sweeping, ornate strokes, he added wings to the lines of infantry. “And the nobles will guard the flanks,” he said, then bent down and added a few more marks to the map. “My cavalry will sweep in as soon as the infantry and archers have stopped the barbarians.”

The last comment was stated as fact, and Azoun was pleased by the confidence Lord Harcourt seemed to be putting in the less experienced generals. Neither Farl nor Brunthar had been involved in a campaign on this scale before.

Finally the pen passed back to the king. He inked it again and added the remaining details to the Alliance’s battle lines. A large W denoted the wizards’ position, behind the line of mixed infantry and archers. To the mages’ rear would lie the camp itself, which Azoun depicted as a number of blocks.

“I want the refugees gathered behind this pavilion,” the king noted after he’d finished drawing. “That will put our army and most of the camp between them and the fighting.”

The three generals nodded in agreement, and Farl volunteered to see that the king’s wishes were fulfilled. That settled, Azoun reviewed the signals the standard-bearers would use to relay his orders, then asked for questions. There were none.

“May the Goddess of Luck and the God of Battle look favorably upon us,” the king concluded. As General Elventree and Lord Harcourt turned to go, Azoun clapped them both on the shoulder. “I don’t suppose I’ll see you before the Tuigan arrive, so fare well. I know you’ll both fight bravely.”

Lord Harcourt dismissed the parting with a wave. “The barbarians will be routed by sunset,” he said firmly as he left.

Brunthar Elventree and Farl Bloodaxe exchanged worried glances. “Let’s hope,” the dalesman said and followed the cavalry commander to the lines.

“What was that all about?” Azoun asked Farl when the others had gone.

The infantry commander paused, then pursed his lips. “We—Brunthar and I—feel that, well, Lord Harcourt may be underestimating the Tuigan’s strength. Given the chance, he’d probably try to rout them with the nobles alone.”

Guiding Farl to the exit, Azoun said, “I agree with your assessment, my friend, but Lord Harcourt is a good soldier. He’ll follow my commands when it comes down to a fight, so his mistaken disregard for the enemy’s strength doesn’t matter.” When the infantry commander paused at the door, the king added, “Besides, there are plenty of things I’m counting on you for already. Leave the command of the generals to me; it gives me something to occupy my time.”

A sly smile on his face, Farl bowed and headed into the heart of the camp to oversee the movement of the refugees. Azoun watched the commander go, then called for a squire to help him don the rest of his armor.

Less than an hour later, after a quick visit to the temporary head of the War Wizards, the king was touring the battle lines. He walked a little stiffly in his full suit of plate mail, but with the practiced gait of one accustomed to the heavy burden of armor. Azoun personally favored training in battle conditions, and he’d often spent an hour or two in the height of summer practicing his swordsmanship dressed in his full armor. Seeing the distress in some of his soldiers’ faces as the early morning sun beat down upon their heavy mail made the king thankful it was a habit he had maintained. Even though it was relatively cool for a day in mid-Flamerule, any sun hammering on an armored body could be brutal.

Soldiers scurried along the front, fortifying their positions or simply taking their place in line. As the generals had agreed, the bulk of the army was split into two lines, but the map had not shown that they were spread across the slope of a wide, low hill. This positioning afforded the bowmen in the second rank a good view of the field. Azoun glanced behind him at the four groups of archers and prayed their longbows would prove a match for the short, curved bows the barbarians fired from horseback.

Adjusting his coif of mail, the king wiped the sweat from his forehead. The hill itself will help the archers, too, he concluded silently. The field’s long slope will almost certainly slow the Tuigan charge enough for the bowmen to whittle their numbers down a little before the first sally.

“Your Highness!” a messenger shouted and dropped to his knees behind the king.

Azoun spun around to see a dirty, panting youth. “What is it, boy?”

“The barbarians, Your Highness. I seen ‘em coming when I was on scout,” the youth reported between gasps. “I raced here as fast as my horse’d carry me.”

Flipping back a mailed glove, Azoun arched his hand over his eyes and looked to the east. The morning sun was low enough in the sky to be blinding to someone scanning the horizon, and the glare prevented the king from seeing any movement in the distance. Only mile after mile of rolling wild grain, intersected by the dark scar of the trade road, met his anxious eyes. Still, the king didn’t doubt the report, and he immediately told the standard-bearer waiting nearby to signal the army to form battle lines.

Azoun patted the scout on the head and sent him to his place at the rear of the army, where he’d be ready as a messenger if the need arose. Trailing the standard-bearer and a few knights behind him, the king walked to the rear of the lines himself. With the help of a wooden ramp, Azoun mounted his fully barded horse. The white destrier pranced nervously, then trotted to the front lines under the king’s guidance.

As Azoun watched, a few soldiers scattered caltrops over the field far in front of the Alliance’s lines. These spiked metal balls, like the wooden barricades that also littered the field, were meant to slow a cavalry charge. All along the first line, the men tightened the straps on their leather armor or shifted under the weight of their hauberks of chain mail. Spear points and pike blades glinted in the morning sunlight as the weapons sat on the ground near their owners, who also rested in anticipation of the conflict. Wineskins passed surreptitiously from man to man as the waiting began.

The experienced campaigners knew that a period of tense expectation, when the lines were formed but the enemy had yet to charge, would be part of the battle that day. They took the delay in stride. Many listened to the sergeants and captains barking orders or tossing encouragement to the men. Others heard the murmur of hushed, worried conversations, and, closing their eyes, dreamed that they were in a tavern far from this particular battlefield. Whatever they did, the soldiers who had seen a large battle before tried their best not to look for the Tuigan on the horizon.

They knew that the enemy would come soon enough.

In fact, it was only one half-hour after the king had signaled the lines to form that the dust from the Tuigan advance became visible, even against the bright morning sun. The signal to prepare for assault rippled through the standards, and the men got slowly to their feet. Last gulps of wine were swallowed, and prayers were quickly murmured. The more hardened mercenaries placed final bets on the number of men they might kill or how many hours the fight might take. Most of the soldiers simply stood and stared at the dark line growing across the horizon.

“Can you see how they’re arrayed?” Azoun asked the armored horseman to his right.

As infantry commander, Farl’s position for the start of the battle was near the king, to the rear of the first line. Be squinted at the enemy troops rushing toward them and, after a moment, shook his head. “I can’t tell from this distance.” Farl’s horse shifted nervously beneath him, and he steadied it with a pat on the flank. “If there are as many warriors as you said, their front isn’t long enough for them to be riding in less than two, perhaps three lines.”

Fear knotted Azoun’s stomach, and he suddenly knew why the men had been so quiet, so tense in the hours before the battle. The king’s work had kept his mind occupied with hundreds of details, and his position had called on him to make a myriad of decisions, all of which drew his attention away from the reality of the conflict. As Azoun sat on his destrier, watching the Tuigan advance, he knew with horrible certainty the battle that might end his life was charging toward him at a fast gallop.

Azoun glanced at the helmet in his hands. The basinet was ovoid, with a high point at the summit that tapered to the ornate gold rim of the Cormyrian war crown. “In a battle against Zhentil Keep this crown might guarantee my safety,” he said vaguely as he slid the helmet over his coif of mail.

“But the khahan has expressed a wish to make my skull into a cup, so I suppose this makes me stand out more than a full purse at a thieves’ guild meeting.”

Having been in many battles before, though none nearly as monumental as the one that faced him now, Farl Bloodaxe recognized the fear in the king’s voice. That’s good, he thought. Fear keeps men alive in war.

He didn’t tell that to Azoun. Instead, the infantry commander leaned close and said, “Thom once told me a story of an ancient Cormyrian king who fought a glorious battle against an enemy who outnumbered him twelve-to-one.”

Frowning, Azoun slid his visor closed. “I’ve heard that story, too, Farl. The king and all his knights but one die in the conflict. Hardly a tale to lighten our moods.”

“Our odds are far better, Your Highness,” Farl said, closing the visor on his own helmet. “We’re only outnumbered three-to-one. At least a dozen of us should make it back to Cormyr.” With a flourish he drew his sword and bowed it in salute to the king.

Beneath his helmet, Azoun chuckled. He meant to return a witty retort to his friend’s dark humor, but when he glanced at the Tuigan line, it was closer than he had expected. The signal went out again to prepare for first assault. Pikes and spears bristled from the Alliance’s first rank, and the tension in the air made the whole army grow as tight as the string on a longbow.

The formation of the Tuigan charge was clear now, but the sun at the enemy’s back and the high, waving grain sometimes hid the horsewarriors from Azoun’s sight. As Farl had guessed, the khahan had organized his men into three rough lines, each about three men deep. Azoun was amazed that the barbarians managed to maintain a straight, orderly charge as they raced across the plain. If Lord Harcourt can see the precision with which the Tuigan are advancing, the king decided, he’s probably modified his opinion of them considerably.

At a few hundred yards, the bulk of the enemy reined in their horses and stopped. A group about half the size of the Army of the Alliance, perhaps fifteen thousand men, raced forward. A steady rumble of drums accompanied the heavy thunder of their horses’ hooves pounding the ground.

“They’re going to test the line!” Farl shouted, waving his sword in the air. The first line gripped their shields a little tighter and braced their polearms for the impact. In the second rank, captains bellowed orders to the archers, who tested the pull of their bowstrings one last time.

Azoun shifted in the saddle to get a better look at the four groups of archers, then drew his sword. The king could see Brunthar Elventree’s standard—the mace, spear, and chain symbol of Battledale in gold upon red cloth—at the rear of the closest formation of bowmen. Like all the groups of archers, the dalesman’s was fortified with dozens of long, sharpened stakes. The palisade formed a wall of spikes that tilted down the hill, ready to repulse an enemy charge.

The king gave the signal for the archers to fire when ready, and Brunthar’s standard wavered in the light wind crossing the field. Six thousand archers drew their bows as one and leaned back, seemingly to point their arrows at the low-hanging sun.

Just as Azoun turned to the battlefield again, the archers fired. Six thousand arrows sliced through the air, and the thunder of the Tuigan advance was momentarily drowned out by the hollow whistle of the deadly missiles. After arcing up into the sky, the arrows seemed to hang at the zenith of their flight, then, in an instant, they dropped onto the charging barbarians.

The black curtain reached the Tuigan charge about one hundred yards from the Alliance’s front rank. Hundreds of horses tumbled into the grass, screaming in pain, tossing their riders under the hooves of other charging steeds. Some arrows struck the riders themselves, often killing their targets instantly. In all, the first volley dropped almost one tenth of the entire charge. This heavy toll might have been a surprise, had not the barbarians’ orderly advance made them easy targets for the skilled western longbowmen.

The attack seemed to surprise the charging horsewarriors, for some of them faltered momentarily. The majority of the Tuigan line galloped on, however, leaping their horses over the dead and wounded on the battlefield. And as the charge picked up speed, another sound rang out over the field: a shrill war cry. The Tuigan screeched their rage at the Alliance as they hurtled forward, brandishing their bows over their heads in defiance.

When the horsewarriors were a little more than fifty yards away, Brunthar Elventree signaled the archers to fire again. Another swarm of arrows sliced through the air, the sound of their passing contending with the war cry in the ears of the western troops. At this relatively short range, the longbows did even more damage to the massed Tuigan troops. Thousands of horses and soldiers sprouted brightly fletched arrows. Their shouts of shock and pain wavered under the shrill war cry.

“Ready for assault,” Azoun said, and the signal was passed. At the right and left flanks, the armored noblemen who made up the majority of the cavalry readied their weapons and anxiously held their horses in place. In the second rank, Brunthar gave the signal to fire at will, and arrows sailed over Azoun’s head in squalls.

The Tuigan reined in their horses and fired their strong short bows. Thousands of arrows bit into the western lines. Azoun reflexively threw his shield up, and he heard two arrows strike it with surprising force. Luckily, the Tuigan seemed to take aim at the front ranks, where many of the men had shields, too. Still, what sounded like a single pained groan went up around Azoun as some of the missiles found their mark.

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