He glanced at Erakes, whose eyes glittered, before returning his attention to the Kraelian. “You all made it through.”
She nodded. “Aye, though some spots are narrow and low. We had to crawl in places, one behind the other.”
Erakes grabbed his arm and pulled him to the side out of the women’s earshot. “Six armed Savatar. That’s all we need to get inside. Three to kill the soldiers manning the catapults and destroy the devices, three to kill the guards at the main entrance and open the gates.”
It was the perfect solution to victory without catastrophic losses to the Savatar horde. It seemed fitting that it was a Flower of Spring who handed them the means by which to sack Kraelag.
He might have celebrated more if Gilene were among the women who escaped. Maybe he could follow the tunnels as well.
Erakes must have read his thoughts. “You’re too big, and you know you can’t be the one to go in there. Your place is here with the warriors you lead.”
It was a stray thought, nothing more. A temptation to torture him while he stood with Kraelag in sight and Gilene so far out of his reach. Azarion sighed. “We step up our arrow attacks, keep the army and the guards on the ramparts occupied while the six sneak into the city.”
Erakes gestured to the Flowers of Spring. “What do you want to do with them?”
Azarion eyed them for a moment. Children among the women, and the women themselves both older and younger than what the Empire usually required of its sacrificial tithes. They were desperate, fearful. The Empire had demanded more sacrifices in the hopes of earning the gods’ mercy by virtue of number. “Keep them here for now. They’re safer with us than trying to flee into the forest, and we don’t need one of them to regain a sudden loyalty to the Empire and run back into the city with tales to tell.”
“We could just kill them.” He grinned at Azarion’s glare. “I’m jesting, Ataman. We owe them a debt, not death, and your agacin would never forgive us if we did such a thing.”
Erakes gave instructions to have their captives-turned-guests housed and fed and given blankets to warm them. He and Azarion gathered with their captains in Erakes’s qara to plan based on the new information offered by the Flowers. They had little time. The first volley from the catapults had taken everyone by surprise, but it wouldn’t be long before the Kraelian heavy infantry used the Savatar’s retreat to march forward and retake the ground Erakes and Azarion’s forces had claimed in the fighting to reach the gates.
When they were finished, he once again sought out the Kraelian woman who had acted as the escapees’ mouthpiece. He found her standing not far from where the others huddled around a fire, her back to them as she stood on the remains of a tree stump and surveyed the battlefield where dead men and dead horses lay strewn. She didn’t turn when he came to stand beside her, and her voice held a far-away quality, as if his presence was nothing more than a vague interruption of her contemplation.
“When your battle is over and the fields replanted, the crops that grow there will whisper the names of the dead. Most don’t stay, but those who linger will speak to the living when the wind blows and the rain falls.”
Another time, and a worm of unease might have crawled across Azarion’s skin at her words. Now, he barely noted them. “The fire witch. How was she when you last saw her?”
Her focus turned from the far place to settle on him. “Are you Azarion Ataman?” He nodded. “She was well. She burned a guard to gain the keys that opened the cell door.” She cocked her head to one side. “You know her better than the others do.”
He liked to believe he knew her best. “Yes.”
Her round eyes gleamed for a moment. “I’ll pray for you both that she survives to return to you.”
“She doesn’t believe in the gods.”
The Kraelian woman’s smile enhanced the strong line of her jaw. “That’s all right. Most of us don’t.”
He had nothing else to ask her that wouldn’t be a repeat of his earlier questions, so he left her to her odd notions of crops and spirits and returned to the camp’s center. He found the six Savatar who volunteered to sneak into the city standing outside Erakes’s qara, among them a familiar and beloved face.
“Why did I know you’d be one of the six?” He scowled at his sister.
Tamura tied her braids into a knot at the back of her head, shoving a pin into the mass to hold it in place. She wore an unapologetic grin. “You would have been shocked if I weren’t.”
She and the other five had removed anything on them that shone or might catch the sun’s glare. Their long tunics were gone, replaced with short leather doublets and tighter breeches. They had set aside their bows and quivers full of arrows, carrying instead a myriad of short knives that made them lethal but didn’t hinder them as they traversed tight spaces.
Erakes eyed the six with satisfaction. “You all understand what to do?” At their nods, he said, “May Agna be with you then.”
Amid half-hearted protests and empty threats to emasculate him if he didn’t let her go, Azarion embraced his sister until her back cracked. “Be careful,” he whispered in her ear. “For my sake and our mother’s as well.” He set her away from him, and she shook like a wet dog before glowering at him.
A solemn affection softened the glower. “If I find Gilene, I’ll bring her out of there. I swear it.”
She saluted before turning on her heel to follow her companions through the camp to where their horses waited to carry them to a rendezvous point. From there, they would go on foot to reach the vulnerable entrance described by the Kraelian woman.
The Kraelian army, its ordered lines broken at first by the catapult volleys and the empress’s shocking injury, had quickly re-formed. Shields staggered by the perimeter’s soldiers formed a shield wall against direct arrow hits. The interior fighters followed suit, raising their shields above their heads to create a roof against the storm of arrows the Savatar would fire into the sky so that they fell down in an arc on the formation.
The sun had not yet centered itself in the sky when the catapults on the ramparts fired more shrapnel into the air, this time to land on the edges of the Kraelian formations where the Savatar light cavalry circled, darting in and out on fast horses to fire directly into the shield wall.
Azarion’s reduced squadron of heavy horse was broken up and re-formed under the remaining three squadrons. They stood at the edge of the encampment, waiting for the signal that the catapults had been disarmed.
He stared at the city walls, fancying that, if he just looked a little harder, he could see through them to the arena where Gilene stayed behind. What had she been thinking not to escape with the other women? She’d been brave to protect them in a way they couldn’t protect themselves from any who might pursue them, but she could have followed once they were no longer pursued.
“Why, Gilene?” he said under his breath. “Why did you stay?”
The moment Tamura and her group opened the gates, he’d be the first to charge through. He cared nothing for looting or pillaging or burning the buildings. All he wanted was his agacin.
The horses and warriors around him grew restless with the waiting, and the armor and barding they wore grew ever hotter in the sun as it approached midday.
An inhuman wail suddenly split the air and set the horses to whinnying and rearing. Below the Savatar encampment, the Kraelian line rippled with a collective shudder, and the shield walls wavered. Horse archers clutched the manes of their mares and abandoned their arrow shots to stay in the saddles and control their frenzied mounts.