David Dalglish - A Sliver of Redemption
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- Название:A Sliver of Redemption
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“I’ve got the other generals preparing their groups,” Gregor said. “If we pelt the bridge with arrows, we can charge while they clear away the dead. Then our archers can rain upon their reinforcements. Once we push through to the other side, nothing can stop us but those angels.”
“We outnumber them fivefold,” said Olrim. “Why should we bottle ourselves up on the bridge?”
Gregor harrumphed as if he were asked a question by a child.
“The bridge might be rough going, but it is still an even fight. What else might you suggest, wading across the water? Nonsense. They can kill us no faster than we can kill them on the bridge, but the river is a different game, priest. Wet and helpless, they’ll cut us down by the hundreds as we try to emerge on the other side.”
“They don’t have anywhere near enough to guard both sides,” Olrim said. “How long can they hold the bridge? Two days? Three? The angels only complicate things further. We must win, and now.”
“Why this mad rush?” asked Gregor. “Why sacrifice certain victory days from now for a costly risk today? This is foolishness.”
Olrim dared not mention Antonil’s name. Melorak had spread word to the land that Antonil had perished. For him to return…where might Gregor’s loyalties lie? What of the other generals who served under him, or the other nobles fighting with him?
“This army is under my command,” Olrim said. He pointed to the crossing. “Send in our men. When there is no room at the bridge, send the rest into the water. Let them see the full might of Karak.”
“As you wish,” Gregor said, slapping an arm against his chest and bowing. Olrim felt the disrespect dripping off him, but he let it slide. Melorak trusted him with victory, and victory is what he would bring. With such a massive assault, there was no way the angels could tip the scales in their favor. They would be too few, and with him and his priests assaulting their every move with spells, they would accomplish little.
Feeling the excitement building in his chest, he smiled and laughed. Let it all out, he thought. The battle approached. Ker would fall to the Lion, and he would be the one to reap the honor and spoils.
T hey’d been given the basics of King Henley’s plan, but Ahaesarus had an inkling that the king kept something hidden from him. He hovered just above the bridge as the rest of the angels flew in their circular formations. Mordan’s army prepared so close, and he watched the great mass of soldiers sharpen their swords, polish their shields, and ready their bows.
“So many,” Judarius said, hovering beside him.
Ahaesarus nodded in agreement. He didn’t feel fear, not for death. He’d seen the other side, had felt the light of the Golden Eternity on his skin. But for the humans? For those slowly dying in Karak’s fist? He feared for them. He knew the price they’d pay for a loss at the crossing. Thulos had conquered a thousand stars. If he escaped from this one, he’d continue on with his destruction. It needed to end. If Ashhur was kind, he would be the one to end it.
“They wish us to ensure they hold the bridge,” Judarius said. “What a waste. Without open spaces, our skills are limited. Why not crash into the rear of our enemy’s formations? Or the priests, why not kill them?”
“They’ve proven resourceful and clever when it comes to warfare, Judarius, more so than us. We are not perfect.”
“Neither are they.”
Ahaesarus stretched his wings, falling a short distance as he did. A single powerful thrust and he shot back up to Judarius.
“If we cannot trust them, how can we expect them to govern themselves, protect one another, and live the life Ashhur desires them to live?” he asked.
Judarius shrugged. “Forget it, then. We will follow their orders, though I wonder how we became their servants instead of the other way around.”
He flew over to join in the formations of flying, and Ahaesarus let him go without saying a word. He understood his frustrations, even if he did not approve. Judarius was the strongest and most skilled angel when it came to warfare. To have him obey the orders of men he could defeat without effort, and who had not once set foot in Ashhur’s presence, surely burned. It was no secret he had been terribly upset by his repeated defeats by the half-orc warrior, either.
“Not perfect,” Ahaesarus said as he drew his sword. “Such a terrible lesson to learn.”
He thought the priest-king’s army might send someone forth to negotiate, but as the front lines tightened, and the soldiers funneled toward the crossing, it seemed they were too eager for war.
“Banner carriers!” he shouted. Three angels flew beside him, each holding a colored banner to issue instructions to the rest of the angels.
With them ready, he waited and watched the fight begin from his vantage point in the sky. Footmen charged the foremost barrier near the edge of the bridge, using their shields to protect them from the swords that lashed out above the barricade. Bram’s defenders fought well, and they held their ground in the bloody chaos that erupted. The few who fell were immediately replaced, their bodies shoved into the water.
Ahaesarus frowned as he watched a twin blast of fireballs leap from their side of the river toward Karak’s forces. The work of Aurelia and the yellow wizard, Tarlak, he was certain. But instead of erupting in a great devastation of fire, the spells sizzled and puffed, their power gone. The angel looked further back, to the line of priests behind the approaching soldiers. They held their arms high and wailed prayers at the top of their lungs. No doubt they’d cast protections of some sort. If the priests countered their magical assault, one of their few advantages was gone.
“Ready Judarius’s squad,” he told his banner carriers. Two of the three raised their banners high and waved them side to side. One of the larger groups pulled free from the formations and like a river of gold and flesh dived for Ahaesarus.
“The priests!” Ahaesarus shouted as they neared. He pointed to the line, protected by dark paladins. “Take them out, or distract them until our casters go unchecked.”
Judarius saluted, an enormous grin on his face. Into the most dangerous part of battle he was being sent, and against the original plans of the humans. No doubt for him, this had been the best outcome possible.
“For Ashhur!” Judarius shouted, lifting his two-handed mace high and then leading his hundred into the fray. They looped once and then dropped, swooping with near reckless speed. Ahaesarus crossed his arms and waited, a strange worry stirring in his gut. The priests were in the open, unguarded. He saw dark paladins nearby, yet they did not protect their most valuable leaders. Something was wrong, but what? Why did they not cast a spell as Judarius approached?
And then the angels hit. They shredded the robes and tore through the priests…who were not priests at all, but illusions of dust that scattered at the mere touch of their weapons. The angels started to bank into the air, but they were still low to the ground, and now in the open. From within the ranks of the footmen, men in plain clothes stepped out, their hands outstretched. The worry in Ahaesarus’s gut turned to full blown horror.
A barrage of shadow flew toward them, compacted into bolts that seeped into their skin and sent their muscles into wild spasms. As they tried to bank around, the ground cracked, and fire erupted from the deep chasms of the world. The first few barreled straight through, and the screaming bodies that emerged on the other side were terrible to behold. The rest streaked higher and higher. One by one angels fell, their wings withering to dust. By the time they reached safety beyond the river, the soldiers of Karak were cheering. Of the initial five-hundred, only four-hundred returned.
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