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soldiers poured through the gap onto the flats, joining their fellows. It was a much larger force than Pied
had envisioned, much larger than his Elves were equipped to handle, but there was nothing he could do
about that. Lifting his sword a second time, he called out the Elessedil battle cry and sent his triangles into
battle.
The triangles advanced as one. Shields locked and spears lowered, they presented bristling walls of steel
tips. The triangles were formed into two lines, three triangles of eighty men each in front and three behind,
the latter offset slightly to the right of the former, so that the leading points of each triangle filled all the
gaps. As the triangles bore down on the Federation, Erris Crewer had the archers on the slopes rake the
enemy soldiers once more, forcing them to cover up with their shields as they scrambled to reform their
shattered lines. Federation archers responded with crossbows, but they could not see their targets and
were forced to fire blindly.
The men of the Federation reformed their ranks once more, but many of those in the front lines had been
downed by the initial attack and the gaps were hastily filled with reinforcements. The result was a
reconfiguration of ranks where the soldiers were unfamiliar with each other and slow to act in concert or
to a common purpose, it was all they could do to make ready to engage the advancing Elves. Their
commanders struggled to unify them, but the chaos was so complete that no one could be heard.
Fifty yards from the Federation lines, the Elves shifted hard to the left, drawing the Federation squares
about to face them. As the Federation lines turned to face the Free-born advance, their rear left flank
was exposed. Ti Auberen, still hidden in the rocks with his men and waiting for his opportunity, was
quick to act. Just before the triangles reached the Federation ranks, he brought his own soldiers out of
hiding and attacked in a rush. Once again, the unexpectedness of the assault caught the Federation off
guard. Having survived the first ambush, the Southlanders were not looking for a second. Ti Auberen s
forces caught their rear ranks unprepared and vulnerable, and they smashed through before the surprised
soldiers could even bring their weapons about to defend themselves.
Caught in a classic pincer movement, the Federation lines collapsed into pockets of men fighting to
survive. The triangles came at them in a series of thrusts, first one rank and then the second, jabbing at
them repeatedly, forcing them back and apart from each other. The Federation defense held only minutes
against the Elves, then fell apart. The attack turned into a rout, the men in the front lines who tried to flee
piling up against those still coming through the draw. Screams and cries filled the air as soldiers fell
beneath the crush, trampled. The ground grew cluttered with dead and wounded, the flats turned into a
slaughterhouse. The destruction of the Federation force was so complete that it became difficult for the
Elves to advance across the body-strewn ground.
Finally, the surviving Southlanders broke free of the charnel house and began to retreat into the draw,
the rear ranks falling back so that those still alive in the front could follow. Most of the latter never made
it. The memory of their defeat on the Prekkendorran was still fresh in the minds of the Elven Hunters, and
they were consumed by a killing lust that would not allow them to stop fighting, even when almost no one
was left alive to oppose them.
 Signal a retreat, Pied ordered the archer at his elbow, exchanging a quick glance with Drumundoon.
The archer did so, three arrows whistling through the midmorning air, their shrieks mingling with those of
the dead and dying men below. The Elven Hunters, streaked with blood and wild-eyed with battle fever,
fell back reluctantly, leaving behind a tangle of dead men and an earth turned slick and matted with
blood.
In the shadows of the draw, the last of the retreating Federation soldiers disappeared from view.
Thirty minutes later, Pied stood at the head of the rise with Ti Auberen and Erris Crewer, watching the
details move through the carnage below, extracting the Elven dead and wounded. The sun was high in the
sky by then, midday approaching, and the air was hot and still and thick with the smell of blood and
death. Flies swarmed in black clouds. The men on the rise were making a conscious effort to breathe
through their mouths.
 It s not finished, he said.
 No, Ti Auberen agreed, looking off into the hills as if he might catch sight of the enemy. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and lean, wearing his dark hair long and tied back.  But they will come at us
another way.
Pied nodded.  They will regroup, reinforce, and come looking for us again, but not through that draw.
There are other trails through these hills, tough to navigate, but usable. They will find one and try to get
around behind us.
 But they won t underestimate us next time, Auberen added.
Pied thought about that a moment, then turned to Drumundoon, who was standing off to one side.
 Drum, see if we have someone in the command who knows this country well enough to talk to us about
its passes and trails.
Eager to be doing something other than standing around trying not to watch the burial teams,
Drumundoon hurried off. Pied would have been happy to go with him.
 What about that airship? Erris Crewer asked quietly. His blocky form shifted.  The one that destroyed
the fleet?
Pied shook his head.  I don t know how badly we damaged her. If they can make her fly, we re in
trouble. We have no defense against her from the ground, and little enough from the air. We have to hope
they can t use her yet.
 They might already be using her against Vaden Wick and our Free-born allies, Auberen growled.  If I
was them, that s what I would do. Break us where we still hold, chase us back into the hills and then hunt
us at leisure.
Pied considered the possibility. Auberen might be right. It made sense to finish the effort to drive the
Free-born completely off the heights, to smash their defenses and claim the Prekkendorran themselves
before worrying about the Elves, most of whom were already scattered to the four winds, his command
notwithstanding. After all, how much trouble could his little force present in the larger scheme of things?
Pied did not fool himself about their chances. They might have won this one battle, driven back one unit
of the Federation. But the enemy forces were vast and close to home, where reinforcements were readily
available. A sustained Federation effort at finding and engaging his Elves would eventually succeed, and
when that happened, they were finished.
He exhaled softly, frustrated. They couldn t win the war, not with the way things stood. The best they
could do was to avoid the forces hunting them long enough to link up with their allies. As their leader, it
was up to him to find a way to make that happen. It was a tall order, one he was not sure anyone would
be able to carry out, let alone a Captain of the Home Guard whose primary duty until two days ago had
been to safeguard one man.
Drumundoon had reappeared with a smallish, nervous-looking Elf with lean features and quick, sharp
eyes that darted everywhere.
 Captain, his aide said,  this is Whyl. He has served on the front for more than a year, working as a
scout on both sides of the line, much of the time aboard airships. He has seen more of the terrain than
most. I think he can help.
Pied nodded.  Tell me what you know about the passes that run through the Prekkendorran to these
hills. Are there many?
The Elven Hunter hunched his shoulders and pursed his thin lips.  Dozens.
 How many that a large force could negotiate, coming south to north?
 Three, maybe four. The eyes skipped across Pied s face to the faces of his companions and back
again.  You think they ll come at us again, Captain?
 Maybe. Could they, if they wanted to, do you think? How would they come? [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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