Read Dragonlance 15 - Dragons Of A Fallen Sun Online
Authors: Margaret Weis
in the direction of the forest. He had not gone far, when he heard
Samar's voice raised in a bellowing cry.
"General Aranoshah! Take two orders of swordsmen off to the
left flank and send two more to the right. We'll need to keep four
units here with Her Majesty in reserve in case they breach the line
and break through."
Break through! That was impossible. The line would hold.
The line must hold. Silvan halted and looked back. The elves had
raised their battle song, its music sweet and uplifting, soaring
above the brutish chant of the ogres. He was cheered by the sight
and started on, when a ball of fire, blue-white and blinding, ex-
ploded on the left side of the hill. The fireball hurtled down the
hillside, heading for the burial mounds.
"Shift fire to your left!" Samar called down the slope.
The archers were momentarily confused, not understanding
their targets, but their officers managed to turn them in the right
direction. The ball of flame struck another portion of the barrie4
ignited the thicket, and continued to blaze onward. At first
Silvan thought the balls of flame were magical, and he wondered
what good archers would do against sorcery, but then he saw
that the fireballs were actually huge bundles of hay being
pushed and shoved down the hillside by the ogres. He could see
their hulking bodies silhouetted black against the leaping flames.
The ogres carried long sticks that they used to shove the burning
hay stacks.
"Wait for my order!" Samar cried, but the elves were nervous
and several arrows were loosed in the direction of the blazing
hay.
"No, damn it!" Samar yelled with rage down the slope.
"They're not in range yet! Wait for the order!"
A crash of thunder drowned out his voice. Seeing their com-
rades fire, the remainder of the archer line loosed their first volley.
The arrows arched through the smoke-filled night. Three of the
ogres pushing the flaming haystacks fell under the withering fire,
but the rest of the arrows landed far short of their marks.
"Still," Silvan told himself, "they will soon stop them."
A baying howl as of a thousand wolves converging on their
prey cried from the woods close to the elven archers. Silvan
stared, startled, thinking that the trees themselves had come
alive.
"Shift fire forward!" Samar cried desperately.
The archers could not hear him over the roar of the ap-
proaching flames. Too late, their officers noticed the sudden
rushing movement in the trees at the foot of the hill. A line of
ogres surged into the open, charging the thicket wall that pro-
tected the archers. The flames had weakened the barrier. The
huge ogres charged into the smoldering mass of burned sticks
and logs, shouldering their way through. Cinders fell on their
matted hair and sparked in their beards, but the ogres, in a
battle rage, ignored the pain of their burns and lurched
forward.
Now being attacked from the front and on their flank, the
elven archers grappled desperately for their arrows, tried to
loose another volley before the ogres closed. The flaming
haystacks thundered down on them. The elves did not know
which enemy to fight first. Some lost their heads in the chaos.
Samar roared orders. The officers struggled to bring their
troops under control. The elves fired a second volley, some into
the burning hay bales, others into the ogres charging them on
the flank.
More ogres fell, an immense number, and Silvan thought that
they must retreat. He was amazed and appalled to see the ogres
continue forward, undaunted.
"Samar, where are the reserves?" Alhana called out.
"I think they have been cut off," Samar returned grimly. "You
should not be out here, Your Majesty. Go back inside where you
are safe."
Silvan could see his mother now. She had left the burial
mound. She was clad in silver armor, carried a sword at her
side.
"I led my people here," Alhana returned. "Will you have me
skulk in a cave while my people are dying, Samar?"
"Yes," he growled.
She smiled at him, a tight strained smile, but still a smile.
She gripped the hilt of her sword. "Will they break through, do
you think?"
"I don't see much stopping them, Your Majesty," Samar said
grimly.
The elven archers loosed another volley. The officers had re-
gained control of the troops. Every shot told. The ogres charging
from the front fell by the score. Half the line disappeared. Still the
ogres continued their advance, the living trampling the bodies of
the fallen. In moments they would be within striking range of the
archers' position.
"Launch the assault!" Samar roared.
Elven swordsmen rose up from their positions behind the
left barricades. Shouting their battle cries, they charged the ogre
line. Steel rang against steel. The flaming haystacks burst into
the center of the camp, crushing men, setting fire to trees and
grass and clothing. Suddenly, without warning, the ogre line
turned. One of their number had caught sight of Alhana's silver
armor, reflecting the firelight. With guttural cries, they pointed
at her and were now charging toward the burial mound.
"Mother!" Silvan gasped, his heart tangled up with his stom-
ach. He had to bring help. They were counting on him, but he was
paralyzed, mesmerized by the terrible sight. He couldn't run to
her. He couldn't run away. He couldn't move.
"Where are those reserves?" Samar shouted furiously. "Ara-
nosha! You bastard! Where are Her Majesty's swordsmen!"
"Here, Samar!" cried a warrior. HWe had to fight our way to
you, but we are here!"
"Take them down there, Samar," said Alhana calmly.
"Your Majesty!" He started to protest. HI will not leave you
without guards."
"If we don't halt the advance, Samar," Alhana returned. HIt
won't much matter whether I have guards or not. Go now.
Quickly!"
Samar wanted to argue, but he knew by the remote and res-
olute expression on his queen's face that he would be wasting his
breath. Gathering the reserves around him, Samar charged down
into the advancing ogres.
Alhana stood alone, her silver armor burning with the re-
flected flames.
"Make haste, Silvan, my son. Make haste. Our lives rest on
you."
She spoke to herself, but she spoke, unknowingly, to her son.
Her words impelled Silvan to action. He had been given an
order and he would carry it out. Bitterly regretting the wasted
time, his heart swelling with fear for his mother, he turned and
plunged into the forest.
Adrenaline pumped in Silvan's veins. He shoved his way
through the underbrush, thrusting aside tree limbs, trampling
seedlings. Sticks snapped beneath his boots. The wind was cold
and strong on his right cheek. He did not feel the pelting rain. He
welcomed the lightning that lit his path.
He was prudent enough to keep careful watch for any signs of
the enemy and constantly sniffed the air, for the filthy, flesh-
eating ogre is usually smelt long before he is seen. Silvan kept his
hearing alert, too, for though he himself made what an elf would
consider to be an unconscionable amount of noise, he was a deer
gliding through the forest compared to the smashing and
cracking, ripping and tearing of an ogre.
Silvan traveled swiftly, encountering not so much as a noctur-
nal animal out hunting, and soon the sounds of battle dwindled
behind him. Then it was that he realized he was alone in the forest
in the night in the storm. The adrenaline started to ebb. A sliver
of fear and doubt pierced his heart. What if he arrived too late?
What if the humans-known for their vagaries and their change-
able natures-refused to act? What if the attack overwhelmed his
people? What if he had left them to die? None of this looked fa-
miliar to him. He had taken a wrong turning, he was lost. . . .
Resolutely Silvan pushed forward, running through the
forest with the ease of one who has been born and raised in the
woodlands. He was cheered by the sight of a ravine on his left
hand; he remembered that ravine from his earlier travels to the
fortress. His fear of being lost vanished. He took care to keep
clear of the rocky edge of the ravine, which cut a large gash
across the forest floor.
Silvan was young, strong. He banished his doubts that were a
drag on his heart, and concentrated on his mission. A lightning
flash revealed the road straight ahead. The sight renewed his
strength and his determination. Once he reached the road, he
could increase his pace. He was an excellent runner, often run-
ning long distances for the sheer pleasure of the feel of the mus-
cles expanding and contracting, the sweat on his body, the wind
in his face and the warm suffusing glow that eased all pain.
He imagined himself speaking to the Lord Knight, pleading
their cause, urging him to haste. Silvan saw himself leading the
rescue, saw his mother's face alight with pride. . . .
In reality, Silvan saw his way blocked. Annoyed, he slid to a
halt on the muddy path to study this obstacle.
A gigantic tree limb, fallen from an ancient oak, lay across the
path. Leaves and branches blocked his way. Silvan would be
forced to circle around it, a move that would bring him close to
the edge of the ravine. He was sure on his feet, however. The
lightning lit his way. He edged around the end of the severed
limb with a good few feet to spare. He was climbing over a single
branch, reaching out his hand to steady himself on a nearby pine
tree, when a single bolt of lightning streaked out of the darkness
and struck the pine.
The tree exploded in a ball of white fire. The concussive force
of the blast knocked Silvan over the edge of the ravine. Rolling
and tumbling down its rock-strewn wall, he slammed against the
stump of a broken tree at the bottom.
Pain seared his body, worse pain seared his heart. He had
failed. He would not reach the fortress. The knights would never
receive the message. His people could not fight alone against the
ogres. They would die. His mother would die with the belief that
he had let her down.
He tried to move, to rise, but the pain flashed through him,
white hot, so horrible that when he felt consciousness slipping
away, he was glad to think he was going to die. Glad to think that
he would join his people in death, since he could do nothing else
for them.
Despair and grief rose in a great, dark wave, crashed down
upon Silvan and dragged him under.
CHAPTER THREE
AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR
The storm disappeared. A strange storm, it had burst upon
Ansalon like an invadmg army, striking all parts of that
vast continent at the same time, attacking throughout the
night, only to retreat with the coming of dawn. The sun crawled
out from the dark lightning-shot cloudbank to blaze tri-
umphantly in the blue sky. Light and warmth cheered the inhab-
itants of Solace, who crept out of their homes to see what
destruction the tempest had wrought.
Solace did not fare as badly as some other parts of Ansalon, al-
though the storm appeared to have targeted that hamlet with par-
ticular hatred. The mighty vallenwoods proved stubbornly
resistant to the devastating lightning that struck them time and
again. The tops of the trees caught fire and burned, but the fire
did not spread to the branches below. The trees' strong arms
tossed in the whirling winds but held fast the homes built there,
homes that were in their care. Creeks rose and fields flooded, but
homes and barns were spared.
The Tomb of the Last Heroes, a beautiful structure of white
and black stone that stood in a clearing on the outskirts of town,
had sustained severe damage. Lightning had hit one of the spires,
splitting it asunder, sending large chunks of marble crashing
down to the lawn.
But the worst damage was done to the crude and makeshift
homes of the refugees fleeing the lands to the west and south,
lands which had been free only a year ago but which were now
falling under control of the green dragon Beryl.
Three years ago, the great dragons who had fought for control
of Ansalon had 'come to an uneasy truce. Realizing that their
bloody battles were weakening them, the dragons agreed to be
satisfied with the territory each had conquered, they would not
wage war against each other to try to gain more. The dragons had
kept this pact, until a year ago. It was then that Beryl had noticed
her magical powers starting to decline. At first, she had thought
she was imagining this, but as time passed, she became con-
vinced that something was wrong.
Beryl blamed the red dragon Malys for the loss of her magic-
this was some foul scheme being perpetrated by her larger and
stronger cousin. Beryl also blamed the human mages, who were