The clangor of battle softened from an unearthly din to a subdued rumbling mutter across the bloody snowfield. Torn standards whipped wildly in the wind, frosty blue lions clutched to lifeless breasts. The corpses of the armored dead were strewn in heaps of iron and flesh. Bannerless men in fur and leather lay slain as well, though they numbered far fewer. Shattered hauberks and discarded swords littered the ground as thick as blades of grass. A few bands of living men roamed the carnage, bloodlust not yet sated, searching for any morsel of violence.
The Yornish reavers had driven Varia's crushed and crippled company to the edge of a frozen ravine. The sun flashed with icy brightness overhead, nearly blinding the weary mercenaries perched on the precipice of the icicle-tinged depths. Brutish forms, half hidden in snow shadow, stalked them purposefully, promising a brutal end.
Varia gritted her teeth and clenched white knuckles around the leather-wrapped hilt of her slender sword. The cold sliced through her scale mail corselet and cotton breaches. Her leather boots were damp with snow, the wetness from the ankle-deep frost soaking into their tops. She had lost her battered helmet an hour ago, and now only her raven hair, drawn up in a tight bun, protected her scalp from axe and arrow.
Little remained of the Maruban host which had ridden forth from Hearthkeep. The axe-rent corpses of blue lions in plate and greaves lay piled five to one against blood-painted Yornish reavers brought down by scores of stabs and cuts. Prince Lennart's overburdened cavalry, unused to galloping in the knee-deep snowdrifts of the far north, had been slaughtered by the Yornish. Northern axes had chopped down the prince in the first doomed charge, leaving his mercenary army to warlord Norden's swift and cruel disposition.
For Varia everything that followed was chaos. Reavers had seemed to rise up out of the snow in countless numbers. The wind had whirled the snow into great white clouds that obscured all but a narrow field that stretched the length of her swordpoint, no further. The snowstorm gained ferocity as if summoned and fueled by the violence.
She'd struggled bitterly against her foes, cutting and stabbing and hacking at the reavers in a frenzy as her comrades died screaming beside her. Commander Ornet had been buried by a sea of Yornish berserkers, leaving their troop leaderless. Erabus had hacked his way to her side with a sword in either hand, his shaggy blonde hair soaked with blood, and informed her that they were the last two captains of the Sure Blades mercenary company still alive.
They'd taken command then and rallied their surviving men into a tight throng that hacked a blind path across the snowy earth. Blundering away from the core of battle, they nearly toppled over the edge of a sharp, icy canyon, and now there was no place left to go but the afterlife.
"We've had it," sighed Erabus with a grim smirk. "Fuck the gods for putting us here. At least we'll go out fighting."
"We'll give the men a good death," she replied. "It's not the payment they signed on for, but it's something."
The captains laughed darkly, the inevitable mirth of the approaching grave, and the mood galvanized the weary men to defiance against the hopeless annihilation bearing down on them. Old Gait was there, veteran of more pitched battles than anyone in the company, and he'd lost an eye someplace along the way. Forlan had survived as well, but his cocky and irreverent bravado had dulled with the tide of battle. The rest she didn't know. Here, so close to death, she wished she'd taken the time to know them better.
Varia had argued against Commander Ornet's decision to throw the Sure Blades in with Lennart, but the prince had seduced him with chests of heavy gold coins and fat, glimmering sapphires. Now that both commander and prince lay dead on the field, payment seemed out of the question.
Too bad,
Varia thought,
but that's where greed gets you.
Looking to Erabus, tall and resolute at her side, Varia was filled with a different kind of regret. Her fellow captain was tall and athletic, clean of face and sharp of eye. His glib demeanor and lightness of speech belied two lethal sword hands and a fierce survival instinct. She'd often thought of clenching his unkempt blonde hair between her hands, the two stripped of armor and clothes as he strained above her, cotton sheets tangled around them. But she'd seen sex lead to conflict too many times in years spent soldiering, so she'd pushed those thoughts from her head. Now blood from a head wound darkened his yellow hair, and resignation lay behind his characteristic humor.
Too late for regrets now,
thought Varia.
"I wish I could see the future," said Varia, the thought jumping into her mind unbidden. "I wish I could see the way out of this for us."
"Are you joking?" replied Erabus, smiling grimly. "I wish I could see the past. I don't remember the important moments half as well as I should." He paused, sensing that Varia was in no mood for flippant comments. "Look, if we survive..." he offered.
"We won't," she said curtly, looking away.
No time for sentiment.
Varia sucked in frigid, gasping breaths as she surveyed the motley survivors of the slaughter. Only nine of her troops remained. Two hundred of their brothers and sisters lay dead on the snow, hacked apart by Yornish axes.
Soon we'll join them
, she thought.
With cleft skulls or run through by the icicles below, it makes no difference.
Without warning Erabus leaned over and grabbed the back of her head, bringing his cracked and bloody lips down to her own. He tasted like sweat and iron. She let it go on, pursing her mouth to meet him, enjoying the warmth of his breath.