Amara sat up slowly, then rose to her feet. She stretched, wincing. The mail hadn't been made to fit her, though it was tolerably close to functional, but her muscles weren't used to the weight of the armor, and they twitched and clenched painfully at odd moments and places as she put the strain on them again. She looked for the man closest to the vord nest and walked toward him.
"Countess," rumbled Bernard. There was a weak half-moon in the sky, occasionally veiled by clouds, and there was barely enough light for her to recognize his profile as he stared at the vord nest. His eyes glittered in the shadows over his face, steady and unblinking.
The vord nest, by night, looked eerie and beautiful. Green light flowed up from the
croach
, a faint, spectral color that created shapes and swirls of color while not managing to give much in the way of illumination. The green werelight pulsed slowly, as though in time to some vast heartbeat, making shadows shift and roil in slow waves around it.
"It's beautiful," Amara said quietly.
"Yes," he said. "Until you think about what it means. I want it gone."
"Absolutely," she said quietly. She stepped up beside him and stared at the nest for a while, until she shivered and turned to Bernard. "Thank you," she said, and held out his rolled cloak.
Bernard turned to her to accept it, and she heard the smile in his voice. "Anytime." He slung the cloak around his shoulders and clasped it again, leaving his left arm clear for shooting. "Or maybe not anytime," he said then. His voice was thoughtful. "You've changed your mind. About us."
Amara suddenly went very still and was glad that the darkness hid her expression. She could keep her voice steady. She could tell that much of a lie. She couldn't have looked him in the face as she did it. "We both have duties to the Realm," she said quietly. "I was blighted when I was a child."
Bernard was silent for a very long time. Then he said, "I didn't know."
"Do you see why it must be?" she asked him.
More silence.
"I could never give you children, Bernard," she said. "That alone would be enough to force you to seek another wife, under the law. Or lose your Citizenship."
"I never sought it to begin with," Bernard said. "For you, I could do without it."
"Bernard," she said, frustration on the edges of her voice, "we have few enough decent men among the Citizenry. Especially among the nobles. The Realm needs you where you are."
"To the crows with the Realm," Bernard said. "I have lived as a freeman before. I can do it again."
Amara inhaled, and said, very gently, "I have oaths, too, Bernard. Ones that I still believe in. That I will not disavow. My loyalty is to the Crown, and I cannot and will not set aside my duties. Or take upon myself others that could conflict with them."
"You think I am in conflict with the Crown?" Bernard asked quietly.
"I think that you deserve someone who can be your wife," Amara said. "Who can be the mother of your children. Who will stand at your side no matter what happens." She swallowed. "I can't be those things to you. Not while my oaths are to Gaius."
They both stood there for a time. Then Bernard shook his head. "Countess, I intend to fight you about this. Tooth and nail. In fact, I intend to wed you before the year is out. But for the time being, both of us have more pressing business, and it's time we focused on it."
"But—"
"I want you to get with Giraldi and make sure every man has his lamps," Bernard said. "And after that, get into position with Doroga."
"Bernard," Amara said.
"Countess," he interrupted, "these are my lands. These men are in my command. If you will not serve with them, then you have my leave to go. But if you stay, I expect to be obeyed. Clear?"
"Perfectly, Your Excellency," Amara replied. She wasn't sure if she was more annoyed or amused at his tone, but her emotions were far too turbulent to allow herself to react other than professionally. She inclined her head to Bernard and turned to walk back toward the
legionares
and to find Giraldi. She confirmed that each
legionare
carried two furylamps with him, and after that she found her way to the rear of the column, where the pungent scent of Walker, Doroga's gargant, provided almost as good a guide as the feeble light.
"Amara," Doroga said. He stood in the dark, leaning against Walker's flank.
"Are you ready?" Amara asked him.
"Mmm. Got him loaded up easy enough. You sure about this?"
"No," she said. "But then, what
is
sure in this life?"
Doroga smiled, his teeth a sudden white gleam. "Death," he said.
"That's encouraging," she said, her voice dry. "Thank you."
"Welcome," he said. "You afraid to die?"
"Aren't you?" she asked.
The Marat headman's head tilted thoughtfully. "Once I would have been. Now… I am not sure. What comes after, no one knows. But we believe that it is not the end. And wherever that path leads, there are those who went before me. They will keep me company." He folded his massive arms over his chest. "My mate, Kitai's mother. And after our battle last night, many of my people. Friends. Family. Sometimes, I think it will be nice to see them again." He looked up at the weak moon. "But Kitai is here. So I think I will stay for as long as I can. She might need her father, and it would be irresponsible to leave her alone."
"I think I will also try not to die," Amara told him. "Though… my family is waiting there, too."
"Then it is good you ride with me tonight," Doroga said. He turned, seized a heavy braided mounting cord, and swarmed easily up it onto Walker's back. He leaned over, tossing the line down to Amara and extending his hand to help her up, grinning. "No matter what happens, we have something to look forward to."
Amara let out a quiet chuckle and climbed up to settle behind Doroga on the woven saddle-mat stretched over Walker's broad back. The gargant shifted his weight from side to side, restless. Liquid sloshed in the wooden barrels attached to either side of the gargant's saddle.
Doroga nudged Walker forward, and the beast lumbered with slow, silent paces toward the area where the
legionares
were forming into their ranks. Amara watched as Giraldi prowled up and down their lines, baton in hand, giving each man an inspection in the wan moonlight. There was none of the centurion's usual bluster and sarcasm. His eyes were intent, his expression hard, and he pointed out flaws on two different
legionares
with a hard rap of the baton. The men themselves did not speak, jostle, or silently roll their eyes as the centurion passed. Every face was intent, focused on the task at hand. They were afraid, of course—only fools wouldn't be, and the veteran
legionares
were not fools. But they were professional soldiers, Aleran
legionares
, the product of a thousand years and more of tradition, and fear was one enemy to whom they would never surrender or lose.
Giraldi glanced up at her as the gargant lumbered quietly by and touched his baton to his chest in salute. Amara returned it with a nod, and the gargant went by to stop near Bernard and his remaining Knightsùhalf a dozen each of earth and wood, none of them as gifted as Janus or Bernard, but each of them a solid soldier of several terms in the Legions, Shields had been abandoned entirely, the woodcrafters bearing thick bows while the earthcrafters bore heavy mauls and sledgehammers—except for the young Sir Frederic, who had opted to carry his spade into battle instead.
Bernard glanced up at Amara and Doroga. "Ready?"
Doroga nodded.
"Centurion?" Bernard asked the shadows behind him.
"Ready, my lord," came Giraldi's quiet reply.
"Move out," Bernard said, and rolled his hand through a short circle in the air that ended with him pointing at the nest.
The gargant's broad back swayed as the beast began walking forward, at no visible signal from Doroga. Amara heard a few soft creaks of worn leather boots and one rattle of what must have been a shield's rim against a band of steel armor, but beyond that the
legionares
and Knights moved in total silence. Glancing around, she could barely see the front rank of the
legionares
behind them, though they were no more than a dozen steps away. Shadows bent and blurred around them, the results of layers of subtle woodcraftings.
Amara's heart started pounding harder as they drew closer to the spectral green light of the
croach
. "Is this what your people did?" she asked Doroga in a whisper.
"More yelling," Doroga said.
"What if they come early?" she whispered.
"Won't," Doroga said. "Not until the Keepers warn them."
"But if they do—"
"We make them pay to kill us."
Amara's mouth felt dry. She tried to swallow, but her throat didn't feel as though it could move. So she fell silent and waited as they walked in tense, ready silence.
Bernard and his Knights reached the forward edge of the
croach
. He paused there, giving the
legionares
behind a chance to settle into their formation, then took a deep breath. He lifted his bow even as he knelt, a broad-bladed hunting arrow lying across the straining wood. He lined up the edge of the arrow with the surface of the
croach
, then released the arrow. The great bow thrummed. The arrow swept across the ground and, thirty or forty yards in, started cutting a long, fine incision in the surface of the
croach
. The waxy substance split, bursting like a boil, and luminous green fluid bubbled up out of the yards-long wound.
The vord nest erupted into violent motion, an alien wailing, whistling chorus rising into the night sky. Wax spiders, creatures as big as a medium-sized dog, burst up out of the
croach
. Their bodies were made of some kind of pale, partially translucent substance that blended in with the
croach
. Plates overlapped one another to armor their bodies while chitinous, many-jointed legs propelled them into leaps and jumps that covered twenty yards at a bound. The spiders emitted wailing shrieks and keening whistles, rushing for the long cut in the
croach
. Amara flinched in shock. She would never have
believed
that so many of them could have been so close, virtually under her nose, but invisible. There were dozens of them, moving over the
croach
, and as she watched the dozens became scores, then hundreds.
Bernard and his Knights Flora bent their bows and went to work. Arrows hissed unerringly into the wax spiders as they scuttled and leaped across the
croach
, these mounted with stiletto-shaped heads for piercing through armor. Launched from the heavy bows only a woodcrafter could bend, they proved deadly. Arrows flew home over and over again, ripping through the spiders, leaving them thrashing and dying, and they did not realize that they were being attacked at all for better than a minute.
Some of the nearer spiders spun to face the Aleran troops, eyes whirling with more luminous light and began bobbing up and down, letting out more whistling shrieks. Others picked up the call, and in seconds the whole horde of them had turned from the wounded
croach
and began rushing at their attackers.
"Now!" Bernard roared. The bowmen fell back, still shooting, arrows striking wax spiders out of the air even as they flew toward the Alerans. Half of Giraldi's infantry advanced onto the surface of the
croach
, grounded their shields hard on the waxy substance, and stood fast as the wave of wax spiders rolled into their shieldwall.
The
legionares
worked together, their usual spears discarded in favor of their short, heavy blades that hacked down upon the spiders without mercy or hesitation. One man faltered as three spiders overwhelmed him. Venomous fangs sank into his neck, and he staggered, creating a dangerous breach in the line of shields. Giraldi bellowed orders, and fellow
legionares
in the ranks behind the first seized the wounded man and hauled him back, then stepped into his place in the line. The slaughter went on for perhaps half a minute, then there was a brief hesitation in the wax spiders' advance.
"Second rank!" bellowed Giraldi. As one, the
legionares
in the shieldwall pivoted, allowing the second rank of fresh soldiers to advance, ground their shields a pace beyond the first, and ply their blades with deadly effect. Endless seconds later, another break in pressure allowed the third rank to advance in their turn, then the fourth, each one allowing more rested
legionares
to advance against the tide of wax spiders.
Their heavy boots broke through the surface of the
croach
so that the viscous fluid within oozed and splashed around every step, and made for poor footing—but they had drilled, maneuvered and fought in mud before, and Giraldi's veterans held their line and steadily advanced toward the cave, while Bernard's archers warded their flanks, arrows striking down the spiders that attempted to rush from the sides.
"Just about halfway there," Doroga rumbled. "They'll come soon. Then we—"
From the mouth of the cave there came another shriek, this one somehow deeper, more strident and commanding than the others. For a second there was silence, then motion. The spiders began bounding away from the Alerans, retreating, and as they did the vord warriors boiled forth from the cave's mouth.
They rushed the Aleran line, dark plates of armor rattling and snapping, vicious mandibles spread wide.
"Doroga!" Bernard bellowed. "Giraldi, fall back!"
The Marat headman barked something at Walker, and the gargant hauled himself around and began to lumber back the way they had come, following the channel crushed through the
croach
. As he did, Amara leaned over the barrels mounted on Walker's saddle and struck away the plates that covered large tap holes at their bases. Lamp oil mixed with the hardest liquor Giraldi's veterans could find flooded out in a steady stream as Walker retreated, leaving two wide streams that spread out through the channel of broken
croach
. Giraldi's veterans broke into a flat-out run, racing toward the edge of the
croach
, and the vord followed in eager pursuit.