SIX

“Halt here,” Captain Falcus shouted. “Brennus, Mazgar-take three more and check out the village.”

“On it, Captain,” Mazgar said, trying to keep the fatigue out of her voice. Then realizing she’d spoken out of turn, she looked to Brennus.

“I’m not trained for this,” Brennus said. “We both know that. You choose.”

She nodded. “Merthun, Tosh, Na-Nasha, come on.”

The others were as weary as she, and in fact she was beginning to worry about Brennus. He was a scholar, not a warrior or battlemage, although his skills had saved her a few times in the past weeks. But he didn’t have the constitution or the training for this sort of forced march, and it was starting to show.

They had managed to fight their way through the southern end of the encirclement on the ridge, but none of the horses had survived and they had lost almost half their number. Since then they had been able to keep ahead of the undead creatures, but only by pushing themselves to their limits. What provisions they had were now gone, and they couldn’t stop to hunt or fish, because the band that attacked them wasn’t alone; it was part of a massive wave moving across the mountains into Cheydinhal County.

They half trotted, half stumbled down the hill to the village, if village was even the word for ten houses arranged around a central area of bare dirt and a well. She looked longingly at the latter, but had a job to do before she could drink from it.

There were about seven people in the square when they entered it, but within moments more began appearing from the houses. They didn’t look threatening; none of them even seemed to be armed.

“We’re Imperial troops,” Mazgar shouted. “Who’s in charge here?”

An older Redguard woman with frizzled white hair stepped toward her.

“I suppose that would be me,” she said. “I’m Sariah, charter-holder of Mountain Watch, such as it is.”

“Sariah,” Mazgar said, “just keep your people still for a moment. We mean you no harm.”

They went quickly house to house, despite the sudden burst of protests and complaints from Sariah and a few others in the square, only confirming what Mazgar already reckoned-that this was a bunch of farmers and hunters. Then she whistled-one short, one long, two short.

A few moments later Captain Falcus and the rest came down.

“Captain, this here is Sariah,” Mazgar said, introducing her, “the charter-holder.”

“What’s this about, Captain?” Sariah demanded. “Since when can Imperial troops search houses without permission?”

“By order of his majesty, or in time of war, lady,” Falcus said. “You and all of your people are about half a day from being dead, every one of you.”

“What are you talking about?” Sariah asked.

“Mountain Watch, eh?” Falcus said, and spat. “You aren’t watching too well.” He raised his voice. “Listen up! You people have fifteen minutes to pack. Take nothing you can’t eat, drink, or fight with, and I mean it. Any horses you have, bring those up now, and bring my men provisions.”

“What gives you the right to order us out of our homes?” Sariah snapped.

“I don’t aim for any of you to die,” Falcus said. “I intend to get you all behind the gates of Cheydinhal ahead of what’s coming. But if you delay me with this senseless prattle-if anyone does-it means some or all of you are going to die. Even now it may be too late. Now-do what I told you. Now!”

The charter-holder’s eyes widened, but she didn’t dissent anymore. Nobody ever argued with Falcus when he used that tone of voice. He might as well have been the Emperor himself.

They took turns at the well, drinking and filling their skins, and those not at the well helped gather up the grand total of six horses the village had to offer. They hooked four of them to two wagons, to carry the youngest and the infirm. Falcus and Kuur, the battlemage, took the other two.

A bit of grumbling started to resurface, and it took more than fifteen minutes, but within the hour they were shepherding forty people ranging in age from two months to sixty-something down a weather-worn track that couldn’t quite be called a road.

Mazgar and Brennus took positions along one of the wagons. Brennus looked pale.

“There’s room in the wagon,” Mazgar suggested.

“I’m fine,” he murmured. “Thank Akatosh I don’t have to carry around all that muscle and bone, like you do.”

“No, all of your weight is in your head,” she replied. “Seriously. A little rest will help you.”

“He can have my place,” a child’s voice said. “I want to walk.”

Mazgar glanced in the wagon and saw that the speaker was a little human in brown twill breeches and a yellow felt shirt.

“See?” she said. “The boy is willing to give up his spot for you.”

“Yeah,” the kid said, “but I ain’t a boy.”

Mazgar studied the short brown bangs, snub nose, and slight frame.

“The girl, then,” she corrected.

“It’s all right,” Brennus said.

“Come on,” the girl said, hopping out. “I’m seven now. I can walk as good as anyone and better than most.”

Brennus shook his head, but in the next step he stumbled.

“Well, considering that,” he sighed.

“Right,” Mazgar said. “We need you fresh when the wormies catch up to us, and that’s no lie.”

She expected a quip back from him, but he just nodded and started trying to clamber in. She gave him a little shove to help him along.

“There,” she said. Then she looked down at the girl. “Think you can keep up with me?”

“I can keep up with anybody,” she said.

“We’ll see about that.”

“You’re an orc,” the girl said.

“Is she, now?” Brennus said, perking up a little. “Here I’ve been thinking that somewhere out there a bear and a pig are living in wedded bliss.”

“What do you mean?” the girl asked.

“Don’t pay attention to him,” Mazgar said. “He’s only trying to get me to mash his face in.”

“Why?”

“Some people are funny that way,” she replied.

“Well, I’d like to see it!”

“Maybe when he’s feeling a little better. What’s your name?”

“Lorcette, but everybody calls me Goblin.”

“Why?”

“I don’t know, they just always have. Mom always said I had ears like a goblin.”

“Huh,” Mazgar said. “Now that I look, you sort of do. Which one of these is your mom?”

“Oh, she’s gone,” Goblin said. “Died when I was six.”

“Mine died when I was seven,” Mazgar said. “At the sack of Orsinium. They say she killed thirty before death took her.”

“My mom didn’t die in a battle. She just got sick.” The girl cocked her head. “Who was your mom fighting?”

“Redguards and Bretons,” Mazgar replied.

“You became an Imperial soldier because of her?”

“I became a soldier because of her. I became an Imperial soldier because if it hadn’t been for the Seventh and Fifteenth legions, a lot more of us would have died. They put themselves in harm’s way for us, got the survivors to safety in Skyrim.”

“Kind of like what you’re doing now.”

Mazgar remembered the terror, the chaos, the walk that went on for weeks through bitter cold-and never having enough to eat. “Let’s hope not,” she said.

“What’s a wormy?” Goblin asked after a few moments of silence.

“What?”

“You said something about wormies catching up with us.”

“Yeah. That’s what I call ’em. They used to be people-then they died and some kind of witchery brought them back, and now they’re all full of maggots and such-so I call ’em wormies.”

She thought the girl would look scared, but instead she looked thoughtful.

“My mom is buried back there,” she said. “Do you think they’ll bring her back?”

“Nah, they like fresher bodies than that. Anyway, it wouldn’t really be your mom, just your mom’s body with a daedra in it.”

“Why would anyone do that?”

“To conquer Tamriel, it looks like,” Mazgar replied. “But I wish whoever it is who had the itch to do that would have chosen less smelly troops.”

“I could say the same about some of his majesty’s elections,” Brennus said.

Mazgar was preparing a retort, but then she saw his eyes were closed. “Mauloch,” she muttered. “Even when he’s asleep.”

They marched along like that, with the girl prattling and keeping good pace. When night fell, however, she and Brennus switched places. The mage seemed much better for the rest, and Goblin dropped off pretty swiftly.

“You let that girl talk your ear off all day,” Brennus said, “and you never once looked like you were going to clout her in the head. That’s not like you.”

“Isn’t it?”

“Remember that kid that hung around our camp on the way up-that little mountain town? The one you threatened to tie to a tree by his bowels?”

“Well, he was annoying.”

“About the same as this one, really,” he said. “Something’s changed in you.”

“In me?” she snorted.

“I think maybe you’re starting to think about spitting out a few little bear-pigs yourself, that’s what I think.”

“You’re more out of your mind than usual,” she said. “Children? Me?”

“Just an observation,” he rejoined. “You’re not getting any younger, and we’ve lost a lot of comrades. Makes you think.”

“Makes you think,” she said. “And way too much.”

“Still-”

“Rest it!” she snapped.

She must have said it louder than she meant to, for a number of heads turned her way.

She couldn’t tell if the look on Brennus’s face was smugness or contrition.

Humans.

A bit after noon the next day, Mazgar saw the high steeple of the chapel of Arkay peeking up through the trees below them. On foot they would have been there quickly, but the wagons were having a hard time going downhill. Mazgar felt the familiar itch of danger at her back growing more and more pronounced, and glanced often over her shoulder, though Coals and Merthun were on the rearguard and both were more than competent.

But it wasn’t Coals and Merthun who sent up the alarm-it came from the north, their left flank, from Na-Nasha and Glavius.

The two men arrived a few moments behind their signal.

“They’ll cut us off from Cheydinhal if we don’t hurry,” Na-Nasha said, wriggling his reptilian fingers oddly, as he often did when agitated.

“That’s it for the wagons,” Falcus said. He turned to the refugees. “We’re going to make it, but we’re going to have to run. Leave everything, you hear? Cheydinhal is just down this hill, not even half a mile.”

Mazgar dumped her backpack and reached for Goblin, but the girl shook her head. “I told you, I can run. Carry Riff Belancour, there-he’s got a funny foot.”

Mazgar nodded and took up the boy, who was probably about six and weighed half as much as her pack. The horses were cut loose and the most elderly put up on them in tandem. Mothers clutched their infants.

Falcus set the pace, a slow trot, and the boy on Mazgar’s shoulders giggled, obviously thinking it was all a game of some kind. True to her boast, Goblin kept up, running alongside her.

Falcus picked up the tempo a little as they burst into a field; the walls of Cheydinhal were visible through the next line of trees.

But the wormies were coming fast, toward their left flank, ranged in a rough phalanx, and Mazgar could easily make the calculation that they weren’t going to make it. A few of the townsfolk screamed or began to cry, but most broke into full-on, terrified flight.

Falcus began shouting orders, but Mazgar couldn’t make them out. A moment later, though, Na-Nasha, Coals, Casion, and Sugar-Lick broke off and formed a semicircle with Kuur behind them.

“Captain!” she shouted. “Permission to join-”

“Denied,” Falcus shouted back. “Keep with your charge. Make it count. Go!”

She exchanged a glance with Brennus.

“I’m with you,” he said. “Whatever you want to do.”

Mazgar glanced down at Goblin, felt the weight on her back.

“I don’t make the orders,” she snarled.

So they ran.

She looked back once before they reached the trees, because she felt the heat on her back and heard the dull thud of an explosion. She couldn’t see anything but black, greasy smoke and billowing flame.

They came through the trees into the clearing around the walls. The gate was off to the right. It was open, and a picket of about a fifty soldiers was formed up there.

They had maybe thirty paces to go when Goblin shrieked. Mazgar looked back and saw six wormies coming up fast.

She set Riff down and drew Sister.

“Get them through the line,” she howled at Brennus. Then she got her footing and charged.

Sister caught the first-a half-charred Dunmer man-right at the juncture of clavicle and neck, and the heavy blade clove halfway through his ribs and stuck there. Bellowing, she punched the next in the face as he lifted his heavy curving blade, and had the satisfaction of feeling the cartilage and bone crush under her knuckles. She used Sister to turn the corpse into the next two, temporarily deflecting them while she reached for another, this one unarmed, and she roared the battle cry her mother had in her last battle. Red sleeted before her eyes, and rage took everything.

The next thing she knew, Goblin was shouting at her. She looked dully down and saw the pile of bodies, Sister still stuck in one. Twenty yards away, about sixty wormies were charging toward her.

She put her boot on the dead thing and heaved out the sword, then turned and pounded toward the gate, where the others were waiting.

Falcus ordered them all to eat and rest, and no one argued. The wormies didn’t have siege engines, and Cheydinhal had its own soldiers, after all, and a mixed company of Imperial troops as well. Within an hour a camp had been set up near the castle that dominated the north end of town, and Mazgar had the first hot food and cool ale she’d had in a long time.

She didn’t remember falling asleep, and the next thing she knew was light coming softly through an open tent-flap.

She left her armor in the tent and went outside to stretch, wandering down to the river that flowed through the city. The sun wasn’t showing over the walls yet, but things were waking up. Wagons of bags and crates made their way across the bridges, pulled by thick, sturdy horses. Across the river, a Dunmer woman was casting a net, which came up wriggling. Mazgar could smell sausage frying somewhere.

But most of the people she saw were up on the walls.

She watched the river flow for a while.

She knew Brennus by the sound of his gait.

“Nice place,” he said. “Have you ever been here before?”

“No,” she said. “The houses look funny.” She nodded across the river. The timbers of most of the structures in town were exposed. In the lower floors they were covered with stone, but the upper ones had plaster between the beams and struts, which were often arranged in whimsical patterns. The roofs were concave peaks, and the shingles looked like scales.

“That’s called half-timbering,” Brennus said. “It’s Morrowind architecture, really-or was.”

She tossed a twig in the river and watched it float off.

“Have you heard anything?”

“No,” he replied, “but I need to have a look with my instruments.”

“Going up on the wall, then?”

“Higher,” he said, pointing to the structure of stone and stained glass that towered over everything else.

“I’ll go with you,” she said.

“I don’t think I need a guard at the moment,” he said.

“You never know,” she replied.

Inside, the chapel of Arkay was all hush and colored light. They found a priest who, after a bit of explanation, showed them the way up to the highest spire.

From there even the people on the walls looked small. She gazed first out over the forest, hills, and distant Valus Mountains. Only reluctantly did she focus nearer.

The wormies had taken up positions a few hundred yards from the gates.

“They’re out of range of ballista and catapults,” she said. “They’re not stupid.”

“No, they aren’t,” Brennus replied. “Necromancers have been known to make such creatures as these, but they are generally mindless. And slow. We’re dealing with something new here. Did you hear what happened last night?”

“What do you mean?”

“A man died of natural causes and rose up as one of these. The watch got him, and afterward they put out the alarm. There were three more cases.”

“Just like Jarrow, and the others we lost on the hill.”

“Right. Whatever spirits animate them clearly can travel more than a few paces.”

“Every time we kill one, we risk a corpse waking up in town.”

Brennus nodded.

“What do you reckon, then? They’ll try to starve us out?”

“No,” the mage replied. “I think they’re just waiting for reinforcements.” As he said it, he pointed.

She saw it then, pale as a cloud with distance, unmistakable.

Umbriel itself was coming for them.

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