VARNA Chapter 14
Forty ships. One hundred and fifty cannon, fifty of which would be landed. Twenty-five hundred mercenaries. Two hundred crossbowmen.
How could we fight an army like that?
I needed advice. Yazgash and Enneiros could help, but I also sent for Tir Tanle. I would have called on Dergun as well, but he needed time to set his new lands in order, especially if he was going to bring fighters to join us in the spring.
Beksha and Yavantay had given us one blessing: by selling or bargaining away future titles, they made it highly unlikely that any of the nobles who had supported my brothers would join them. Like us or not, Sanatha and I were by far the better option for them.
But would they bring their men to fight for us? And could we find new sources of manpower? Hundreds of Varnan men - not to mention non-humans - had been killed or seriously wounded. Even if we could raise a large army, we would likely still be outnumbered.
And those guns...
We'd seen cannon in Galtin's Port. They had varieties of guns that we simply couldn't match, for range, accuracy, or weight of shot. I'd avoided presenting our fighters as targets for Merik's guns at Borovo Ridge; could we manage something like that again?
I also needed more information on the mercenaries that they had hired. Were they trained fighters, or merely adventurers and desperate men? Pirates, or veterans with combat experience? And was this Kurebir a cautious man? Kalju had painted him as more of a quartermaster than a battlefield general, but one never knew.
It would be unlikely that they would be bringing many horses, unless it was to drag their cannons about. Or perhaps they would expect to capture horses wherever they landed. I made myself a note to consider stripping Whydah of horses and mules so that the enemy could not acquire them.
I was already resigned to losing our port city again. The seaward defences would not hold against so many ships and guns. To attempt a spirited defence would be to invite our first defeat.
Avoiding defeat was one thing, but how could we win?
We would have several hundred mounted men, unless the Penedas deserted us. What could they achieve? I was counting on Durgat's half-orcs and Alissara's elves, but I would have to employ them wisely. I couldn't leave them exposed to the mercenaries' cannons.
But there were two more things that we had, which they didn't.
Glasha. And me.
***
I went down the river by myself (with Murzosh trailing me, and five more half-orcs within call). My mind was clear - I'd done plenty of thinking.
In the field where Glasha and I had trained, I set to work. I gathered the aether, and let it build within me. Then I gathered more. And more, until I was fit to burst.
I selected a solid looking stone, some fifty yards away.
And I tried to split it, using only the power of my mind.
***
I became aware of a soft, gentle sensation on my face.
My eyes opened, ever so slowly, and focused on a pleasant sight. Glasha. She was stroking my cheek with her fingertips.
- "You frightened us, Tauma." she said, ever so softly. "What were you doing?"
- "Walking the cliff." I said.
That frightened her. That was when I discovered that Saska was on my other side. She'd been sleeping, but she woke up when Glasha spoke.
- "What cliff?" she said. Saska took my hand.
- "I have to travel, for a bit." I said. I turned my head back to Glasha. "I need to see your father - as soon as possible."
I was remarkably lucid, considering that I'd been unconscious for the better part of two days. Murzosh had carried me back to the Palace, and somehow snuck me into our quarters without letting half of Elmina know what had happened.
When I was back on my feet, my bodyguard hovered over me like a nurse.
- "Are you going to do this again?" he asked me.
- "Do what? Magic?"
Murzosh didn't reply to that. He just fixed me with his big, baleful eyes.
- "I can't protect you if you do that." he said.
- "I'm not asking you to."
By the next day, I felt strong enough to go back to the training field. Murzosh was plainly unhappy, but I wasn't prepared for Glasha and Saska.
- "No!" said Glasha.
- "Whatever you're doing," said Saska, "it's too dangerous."
I understood what they were saying. They were concerned - worried about my safety.
- "Glasha - would you ask Sanatha to join us? And Saska - could you call on your mother?"
I gathered my thoughts - and just a little bit of aether.
Then I looked at my family. Four women. It would have been five, had Sirma been old enough. They were all worried about me.
- "I'm the Witch King." I said.
Sanatha's mouth fell open, but Glasha scowled. Saska was most upset.
- "Don't
say
that!"
- "I've been trying to come up with a strategy to meet the mercenaries." I said. "We're outnumbered, and outgunned. We risked a battle at Borovo, because we were facing Merik. I knew that we could beat him."
- "And we did." said Tir Tanle.
- "But I don't know who will be commanding the mercenaries. Yavantay is the recruiter and paymaster, Kurebir is the organizer and Beksha is the figurehead. But who will be making the decisions? Their cannon will be better than anything we have -
how much
better? I don't want to send Alissara's and Durgat's people to their deaths."
Saska sniffed.
I looked to her mother.
- "You taught me to look at the enemy's disadvantages, and our advantages. Well... that's what I'm working on."
All four of them loved me, in their own way. I was fairly sure of that. But none of them fully understood what I was saying - except perhaps Glasha.
- "Our enemies call me the Witch King." I said. "Perhaps that's what I need to be. How many advantages do we have? A little mobility, against fifty cannon. Every possibility I see involves massive loss of life on our side."
- "We can't afford to lose you, Tauma." said my wife.
- "But how can I ask our folk to risk their lives, Saska... while I stay protected?"