The Woles came through for us again, with another priceless piece of intelligence; the Crolians were going to mobilize
before
the first day of spring. Their armies would already be on the move when their declaration of war reached the Queen in Cercen.
- "What's the point of that?" asked Colonel Neslann. "The roads will still be muddy, and they won't do more than a couple of leagues a day."
- "Which will put them a couple of leagues closer to the border." said Votuda. The two Colonels glared at each other.
- "That's
if
the roads stay muddy." I said. "What if they get an early bit of good weather?"
My Colonels digested that idea. Not surprisingly, they didn't like the taste very much.
"That's why we'll also move early. I want us in position before the Crolians can force a choice of fields on us."
I knew where I wanted to fight, if at all possible.
The last month of winter passed quickly, for some. Tallia was too busy to remember much of it.
Isa and I made love every night, at least once. The level of intensity in our relationship was steadily increasing. Perhaps it had always been there, for her; but I was beginning to catch up.
She was becoming my closest friend, as well as my lover. It was a role that Tudino might have filled, if she could have been sexually active every night.
The quality of our time together was ideal, but we also had quantity, as we spent large parts of every day (and every night) together. The nearest I'd ever come to this kind of closeness was with Tallia, in the year before Limset.
I couldn't necessarily explain it, and I'd already done too much comparing of the two women. But there was no question that what I had with Isa surpassed any relationship I'd ever been in.
We were close friends, confidants, who shared a passion for the military, and for each other. She was intelligent, kind, and good-humoured. Interesting, and interested. I couldn't find fault with her.
Added to that was the dread of time. If Penchens couldn't match the intensity of a Westron hemmer, they still had a terrible time limit hanging over their heads. A year, give or take a month or two.
And I'd wasted a couple of weeks getting over my reservations and inhibitions. Isa never mentioned those lost days, never chided me.
That night, she rode me hard, shifting her movements to maximize my pleasure - and hers. I loved watching the expressions on her face, and the bobbing and bobbling of her lovely breasts.
As I felt the sap rising, I took hold of her hips, and drove myself up into her. My orgasm was like a volcanic eruption.
Afterwards, she gently disengaged, and lay down next to me. Her little grin, testimony to her satisfaction with a job well done, always made me smile.
- "I love you." I said. I hadn't planned to say it, but the moment the words were past my lips I was glad.
- "I know." she said. "I've felt the change in you."
- "You were right: it
does
flow both ways."
***
The last days of winter featured milder temperatures than normal, and only the occasional rainstorm (as opposed to the torrential downpours we were accustomed to see at this time of year). The roads were wet, and treacherous in places - but they were passable.
Had the Woles not provided a warning, the Crolians might have stolen a march on us. As it was, the New Model Army was able to begin moving early, too.
I took Tudino and Neslann, Faregil and Frad, Votuda and Cyrte. Langoret would follow with the rest of the army, plus our artillery and ox-carts. For my plan to work, I had to reach the ridge at Kesmansha first.
And the Crolians had to be advancing by the most direct route. I prayed every hour that they were counting on speed, surprise, and brute strength, rather than subtlety and deception.
To be certain, though, I sent Votuda and Cyrte southeast, to a point where they would encounter our enemy first if the Crolians were taking the secondary route. She could immediately send us warning, and then carry out a fighting withdrawal until we could move to support her.
Without our heavy baggage, the brigades I'd chosen moved quickly. We reached the little village of Kesmansha before sunset of the second day.
Kesmansha sat on the bend of the Great Road. We approached from the south. Just after it passed the village, the road curved to the east. Almost three thousand yards further on, the road skirted the northern edge of the massive ridge I'd built my strategy around.
The heights, seen from the east (the direction the Crolians would be coming from), would be daunting. The slope was steep, and slippery in places. The top of the ridge was also large enough to comfortably deploy ten regiments, with all their artillery.
If we were on top of the ridge, only a supremely aggressive Crolian general would dare to attack us - and he'd know that he would be taking heavy casualties.
From the western side, the ridge wasn't quite so intimidating (not that I had any intention of attacking it).
I left Faregil's brigade in the village, while Tudino and Neslann and their regiments climbed the ridge with me.
- "We could stop 30,000 Crolians here." said Tudino.
- "We could. But I don't want to stop them; we're going to destroy them." I said.
Tudino just grinned, but Neslann took the bait. "How?"
- "Imagine you're the Crolian General." I said. "Look down there."
On the extreme left of the Westron side, there was a high hill, an excellent defensive position. "Picture Faregil's and Frad's regiments there."
- "Alright. I wouldn't attack there."
- "Now look at the centre." The road ran into the village, with small forest just south of that. "Imagine that you see two regiments in front of the village - Langoret and Yna, say. Plus you can tell that there are two Penchen regiments just behind those trees."
- "I can imagine it. Yes." said Neslann. She was enjoying pretending to be the Crolian General.
- "You see the enemy right?" I asked.
- "There's a stream. Doesn't look like much of an obstacle. Orchards behind that. How many troops are there?"
- "Only two regiments." I said. "Yours and Tudino's."
- "That's it?" said Neslann. "We'll be awfully spread out."
- "I know." I agreed. "What do you see behind the orchards?"
Tudino whistled. Neslann swore.
- "If they can break through the orchards, the road is right there. They can cut off the rest of the army - we'll have nowhere to retreat."
- "Tempting?"
- "What are you thinking, Cook? They could destroy our whole army!"
- "So if you were the Crolian General, that's where you'd attack?" I asked.
***
The location was ideal. It was all just a matter of making sure that the Crolians did what I needed them to do - what I
expected
them to do.