THE THREE SISTERS Chapter 15
- "The Duchess is going into labour." said Prosquetel.
Sometimes the Fates let you enjoy a few good moments before they drop the whole mountainside on you.
"Your daughter, your wife, and some of the other women are with her." he continued.
We'd held the Izumyrians off, even while burdened with elderly folk, pregnant women, and children. We'd bloodied their noses several times, while losing only a few of our own. But we'd run out of places to stand and fight.
On the morrow, our enemies would sally up the gentle slope, and slaughter us all. I was wracking my brain to find a way out of our hopeless situation. I'm ashamed to admit that I briefly considered the option of bargaining with Count Seaglitz - even if it meant handing over the Lowlanders.
But that wouldn't do. Never mind the dishonour: the Count had offered a bribe once before, and we'd spurned it. He would laugh in our faces, and unleash his troops. They would kill all of the men. Some of the women would be lucky enough to die fighting.
I didn't think that Sulcen would let herself be captured. But could Tanguiste find the desperate courage necessary to kill herself? Could Guenna?
And poor little Dengelle would have to face her greatest nightmare all over again.
Vingoldas came to stand beside me. I was proud to have him in our family. He was a good man. Now he and Tanguiste would never see their children - my grandchildren.
- "What can we do, Veran?" he asked. "If we stand and fight, is there a chance that some of us could get away?"
- "Tan won't leave the Duchess. She's in labour."
- "I know. I was thinking of ... some of the others."
- "We can't run." said Yevna. "They'll catch us. Even if we abandoned the old and the young." She glanced at me, even though she knew that that wasn't an option.
It was dusk. In the gathering gloom, the others who could still fight were gathering around us. Guenna came up behind me, and laid a hand on my shoulder. She didn't say a word.
But someone else had an opinion, and wasn't shy about sharing it.
- "We can defend the next position, and make the invaders pay in blood for every step!" That was Iduallon, the Lowlander Lieutenant who didn't know how to shave. Asshole.
- "There
are
no next positions." said Yevna.
Guenna cleared her throat. "That's true. Unfortunately, there are no major obstacles for the next six leagues."
It was ridiculous. We had sixteen fighters left, if I included the wounded. Seventeen, if I wanted to count white-haired Prosquetel. Seaglitz had 80 or 90 troopers.
- "We can't move the Duchess." said Gerimir, the other Lowlander. He was wounded, but still standing. Why did I quite like him, while his companion Iduallon made my skin crawl?
- "We can't run, and we can't stay here." said Vingoldas. "That's pretty much it, in a nutshell."
- "Then I hate to say it," said Giedra, "but I agree with what's-his-name: we stand and fight. We'll take some of the bastards with us."
There were a few grunts and half-hearted noises in support of her stance.
- "That's might work for you, Giedra." I said. "But what about the women who are captured?" I could see Eliv, standing next to her, and Dengelle was over with Yevna, as always. I didn't try to catch her eye.
- "Then what do we do, old man?" snarled Giedra. "You have a
better
idea?"
Until that very moment, I hadn't come up with anything at all. But as I thought of little Dengelle, an idea began creeping into my head.
I stood up.
- "We fight." I said. "Any of you who will stand with me ... we fight, and we sell our lives as dearly as we can. We hold off the Izumyrians as long as we can ... so that others can escape."
I looked to my eldest daughter.
"Yevna knows these mountain paths better than anyone. She and Inisian roamed the slopes for years. She knows every trail, every glade, every brook and stream."
"She can take a party of the young and physically fit - especially the young women. Maybe a handful could escape, if they take to the woods. If Yevna led them by secret tracks that only she knows of ..."
For a moment, they considered what I'd said. There were no cowards here. They'd all shed blood and buckets of sweat to get us this far. Now I was asking some of them to sacrifice their lives in order to grant others a slim chance of escaping.
- "That's not going to happen." said Yevna. She didn't even look at me as she stepped forward.
"I agree that we can't outrun horses." she said. "And it's true that if we make a stand here, we'll lose. But if we can't retreat, and we can't stay put ...
why can't we go forward
?"
It was logical, in a strange way - and completely ridiculous. I could see Giedra's teeth flash as she smiled.
Of course
this type of insanity would appeal to her.
- "Do you have some sort of plan?" asked Prosquetel.
She didn't. Yevna only had a response. If they corner you, fight back.
But her youngest sister spoke up.
- "
I
have a plan." said Guenna.
***
As Guenna began to speak, I understood what had happened. She'd had the same reaction as Yevna, or Giedra: if you can't stay where you are, or go back, then ... go forward.
[1]
- "You all heard Yevna. We can't outrun horses. We have no more good positions to defend. And we can't leave in any case, because the Duchess has gone into labour.
But the Izumyrians don't know that
."
"They got the better of us today - and they probably expect to do the same tomorrow. They have no idea that the only option we have left is to attack them."
- "They'll have plenty of guards." warned Prosquetel. "You won't find it easy to surprise them."
- "Of course they will." said my daughter. "But we have one more advantage: this is where my sisters and I grew up. We lived for six years with Inisian and his mother - in that very same cabin."
"No one - no one - knows the land around here like Yevna. She knows exactly where the Izumyrian horses will be."
Even as she said it, I wanted to punch myself. Of course - I knew it, too. There was only one piece of relatively flat, open land near here, that was also close to a source of water.
It was next to the little stream where we'd found the body of Moruith's oldest son, Inisian's brother, all those years ago.
It was the only logical way for the Izumyrians to water their horses, unless they wanted to carry it in buckets over a quarter-league. Did they even have buckets?
Guenna had heard a few of us say that we couldn't outrun horses. That made her realize that the Izumyrians would take care of their mounts - which meant that they would keep them near water, but also that they wouldn't let any harm come to them, if they could possibly help it.
An attack on their mounts would bring all of them running.
As my daughter explained her idea, I could see people lifting their heads, standing a little straighter. We had all been exhausted, only a few moments ago. Guenna had just given us a little sliver of hope.
It could still easily end in all of our deaths. There was no guarantee, even if her plan worked, that we would survive the next day.
But there was a certain inspired madness to it ... and it was better by far than anything I'd heard so far - including the idiocy I'd been suggesting earlier.
Guenna's plan had two prongs - that meant dividing our forces. Unfortunately, we only had one Yevna. She knew the lay of the land better than anyone, and she was also one of our best archers - by far.
I made one little suggestion, which my daughters agreed to. We then split our remaining fighters into three groups.
Vingoldas would lead the first party. He was wounded, and not nearly mobile enough to be in either of the two other groups. With him was Gerimir, the wounded Lowlander, and Hedyn, who was as stealthy as a bull in heat. There was no way we wanted him blundering through the forest at night. Old Prosquetel protested, but he was included in this group.
Their task was to guard the path to Moruith's house. It was unlikely that the Izumyrians would attack at night, but if they did, this little group could fight for a few moments, while giving the women behind them a choice: to kill themselves, or to face being captured.
If that sounds ugly ... it was. Vingoldas was going to have to explain it to Tanguiste.
The second group was Yevna's. She had Giedra and her two friends, Eliv and Rion. Iduallon the Lowlander was with them, as were Odma, Weyl, and of course Dengelle, who couldn't bear to be parted from Yevna.
My eldest had a moment, before we went our separate ways, to come over to me. Yevna had found some wet soil, which she'd rubbed on her forehead and her cheeks, so that the moonlight wouldn't reflect off her skin. She placed a hand on my shoulder.
- "I know what you were trying to do." she said. "And ... I appreciate it. But I won't save Dengelle by sacrificing my sisters -
and
my father."
I embraced my daughter.
- "
I love you
." I whispered. Tears came to my eyes.
"I should have told you more often. I should have told you every day."
- "You did." Yevna's voice cracked. "
Every day ... you did
."
- "Come back." I said. "You don't have to die ..."
She grunted. "I'll come back ... if you do."
The third group was mine. I had Nameless and Libot, the two best archers, next to Yevna. Red-headed Seva was with us, too. I'd had to flatter and cajole her, telling her how much we needed her, to reconcile Seva to the fact that she wouldn't be with her brother (Weyl), or her lover (Iduallon, the Lowlander).