Grimvaldr stood in his stirrups and looked along the line of warriors. His elite were organised into two hundred phalanxes, five deep and ten long. Rows of archers stood in position behind them, and then two columns of another twenty thousand Wolfen.
The castle once had rolling green plain spread out before it, gentle hills rising into forest along its sides. Now, the plain was churned, the forest burning; the king surveyed the horizon, knowing that after several days of preparation, they were out of time. There would only be one chance.
Grimvaldr turned to two of his generals, Lon and Karnak. ‘The east and west columns must not break. You must keep the Panterran attack funnelled down the centre of the plain. If too many of the gravilents get in among our troops, their armoured hide will take too long to penetrate, and we do not have the time or troops to spend on bringing them down.’
Karnak nodded. ‘Mighty stones have been piled high, and on top of that will be Wolfen spears — they will not break on our eastern side, sire.’ He looked at Lon. ‘And if the general needs help, I’ll make sure they don’t break on his side as well.’
Lon laughed and struck Karnak’s armour with his fist. ‘You’ll be singing in Valhalla long before they break my line, oldling.’
The generals both turned to Grimvaldr. ‘Ready, sire. On your word.’
‘Take your positions.’
Karnak and Lon turned to each other and gripped gauntleted hands at shoulder height as they stared into each other’s face. Lon spoke quietly. ‘May Odin allow us to spill rivers of Panterran blood before he calls us.’
Karnak grinned. ‘Odin’s strength, brother.’
Both pulled on their reins and wheeled their horses, racing them to either side of the plain.
Grimvaldr watched them go as Sorenson rode up beside him. ‘The scouts report that no sign of the far Wolfen have been sighted.’
Grimvaldr looked to the sky. ‘They will come… If they are able, they will come.’
The Panterran’s drumming stopped, and horns blared eerily across the plain.
‘They come.’ Grimvaldr turned his horse back to the front of the ranks with Sorenson beside him. He rode along the lines of Wolfen, holding up his fist. In turn, the Wolfen thumped gauntleted fists against their chests as he passed.
‘This day, we face a threat from vile creatures of the dark. They will give no quarter — neither must you. The Panterran would seek to bring this kingdom down, and crush the Wolfen into dust.’ The king roared, ‘But they do not know who it is they fight!’
A roar rose all along the ranks. The sound of fists being beaten against armour was deafening as Grimvaldr rode along the lines of his Wolfen.
‘I will lead you into battle, and I will see victory, or I will see you in Valhalla. Odin be with the mighty Wolfen!’
Grimvaldr lowered his visor. The silver snarling wolf covered his own fearsome visage, making him seem like a shining automaton made for war.
Along the lines, one after another, steel visors clanked down into place.
The Wolfen were ready.
Mogahr was carried in a sedan chair to the highest point on the hill, so she could watch the chaos from on high. She smiled, counting the ranks of the Wolfen warriors, knowing she had them enormously outnumbered.
‘The foolisssh king waitsss in vain for hisss warriorsss from the far landsss. Perhapsss he will be joining them, before they will be joining him.’ Her hissing laugh carried in the air, but was drowned out by the sound of the massive gravilents, lumbering out onto the plain.
The giant creatures were fully armoured now, their heads were covered in iron helmets that had long sharp spikes welded into their flesh to the sides and front. In battle, they would swing their low skulls from side to side, decimating the tightly packed troops.
These living tanks swarmed with Panterran archers and Lygon warriors. The beasts’ objectives were simple — break through the forward ranks of the Wolfen, so the Panterran could rain arrows down on their heads, and then allow the Lygon to drop down and bring hell in among their midst.
And this would only be the first wave of the Panterran attack.
Mogahr hissed, ‘Take me a little clossser, I wisssh to sssmell the blood as it flowsss.’
Sorenson watched as the colossal beasts started to pick up speed. Still in almost total darkness, the moving mountains were unmistakable. To the east and west, Lon and Karnak’s columns had done their job. By piling boulders high, they created an uneven battleground that did not suit the low, heavy war-beasts. For now, their riders would choose a path that allowed them to pick up speed — right down the Wolfen elite’s throats, and right where Grimvaldr wanted them.
Sorenson looked to the king next to him; like the rest of the front-line Wolfen, their expressions were unreadable behind their helmets, but all waited on Grimvaldr’s word. Beside the king sat Freya, her hand already on the hilt of her sword, and next to her was the smaller figure of Eilif, her head bowed.
Sorenson moved up beside the princess, and could hear the small whisper of a voice drifting out from behind her visor — perhaps a prayer. He reached out to touch her shoulder. At first, she jumped at the contact, but then settled back in her saddle. He leaned across to her.
‘There was an old philosopher who once said, “Use an enemy’s strength against it, and make that strength its weakness.”’ He lifted his visor and smiled at her. ‘Fear not, princess. We have a few tricks to play yet.’
Eilif nodded jerkily and she drew in a shuddering breath.
The Wolfen on horseback pulled at their reins as the horses started to become agitated. By now, they could not have failed to catch the scent of the strange beasts approaching them. Every Wolfen could feel the thunderous impact of the gravilents’ feet as they struck the ground, each now reaching speeds akin to a horse’s gallop. Unchecked, they would easily crash through the Wolfen lines.
Grimvaldr raised a fist. ‘Hold.’ His voice was strong and steady.
Sorenson lowered his visor.
Eilif felt smothered beneath the steel of her helmet. She looked left and right along the line of riders; all faced the coming attack bar one — a dozen warriors down the line, one looked back towards her. It was Bergborr; she could tell by the dark crest and black horse tail streaming from the rear of his helmet. He raised a fist to his chest and opened his hand towards her.
My heart for you, the gesture meant. She was supposed to catch it and press it to her chest. Instead, she looked away.
She felt a deep sense of dread in the pit of her stomach, and closed her eyes — wishing that when she opened them again, she would see Arn somewhere along the ranks, his long hair blowing back from his shoulders, his glowing bare skin and eyes alight with laughter. He would do something that would make her laugh, even now.
She opened her eyes, and the dread remained. She used all her strength to stop herself fleeing immediately to find him, to be with him — torn between her sense of duty and her desire to see him, just once more. She hoped that he and Grimson were safe.
Eilif reined in her horse as the tremors intensified. She had been trained since birth for battle, and practised most days in the art of the sword and bow, and even unarmed combat, but the approach of the massive creatures, bristling with spikes, and covered in Panterran and Lygon warriors, made her doubt her abilities and sapped her confidence.
She swallowed with difficulty and held her head high. I am the daughter of the king, a Wolfen princess, she thought. I will not fail this day.
The king roared once again, ‘Hold!’
And then, ‘Pull!’
Thick, buried ropes, trailing out onto the plain, and hidden in the dark, were lifted and pulled by dozens of Wolfen warriors. Straining at first, and then picking up speed, as if whatever held them, was ripped away.
In the dim light Eilif watched in bewilderment, and then felt her heart soar — huge areas of the flattened and churned land in front of the castle were sliding away as logs bound together and covered in soil were dragged from the top of deep pits.
Of course — the Wolfen with shovels, she remembered.
To the sides, Karnak and Lon’s warriors had done their jobs, and kept the mighty beasts funneled up the centre of the plain. The Panterran screamed warnings, but the speed and mass of the creatures was too much to allow them to slow or even turn, and their enormous bodies fell into the pits. Of the fifty monstrous beings bearing down on the Wolfen, more than forty tumbled into the voids.
Use an enemy’s strength against it, and make that strength its weakness, Sorenson had said. She caught his eye, and he threw back his head and laughed.
‘And now their weight will do the rest,’ he roared.
The bottoms of the pits were filled with sharpened spikes and the weight of the gravilents forced them deeper into the impaling traps. Lygon and Panterran could be seen climbing out of the pits, and the king held up one arm, and then swung it down. ‘Fire!’
The Wolfen archers fired a deadly volley of arrows onto the plain. Some Panterran tried to run back to their ranks, but the Lygon charged ahead. It didn’t matter — the plain was too long, too open. As arrows rained down, it became their burial ground.
The archers fired their next volley at the remaining gravilents who were nearly upon them. Their target was not the charging giants, but their riders.
In took only seconds for the last few moving mountains to be at the Wolfen front lines. Once again, the king’s arm came down, and ranks of Wolfen stepped to the sides, revealing the tips of sharpened tree trunks. Each of the shaped logs was forty feet long and mounted on a simple slide, with ropes tied off and straining at their base — in effect they were giant arrows.
Axe blades fell, and ropes were cut, flinging the thick trunks forward, like the mighty bolts of Odin himself.
Few of the giant spears found the soft flesh between their armour plates, and many were simply trampled to kindling beneath their tree-trunk legs.
The far killing was now at an end. This time, when the king’s arm came down, it was to draw forth his sword.
The war was here.
The gravilents were pulled by the chains linked to metal rings embedded in either side of their head, and though they roared in frustration, anger and pain, they were forced to follow their rider’s commands. Their broad heads swung back and forth, the huge spikes and blades cutting a swathe through the warriors not fast enough to leap out of the way. Giant Lygon leapt from the backs of the creatures into the melee, and Panterran fired volley after volley of poison-tipped arrows into the seething mass of Wolfen.
Though the Lygon were enormously powerful, they were few in number and no match for the front ranks of the Wolfen elite. They were soon brought down, and the Panterran, after firing their arrows, slipped from the backs of the beasts and sprinted in retreat across the plain.
A cheer went up along the Wolfen ranks. Though dozens had been crushed and cut down by the blades and spikes of the gravilents, they had managed to withstand this first wave.
The Wolfen whoops of bravado fell silent, as the drumming of Panterran resumed, and with it the more sinister rhythm of giant axes and maces banging against armour. The signal for the next attack had been given; even in the darkness, the wave of bristling orange-and-black shapes could be seen flooding across the plain. This time it was the turn of the Lygon — and this time there would not be dozens, but hundreds upon hundreds… thirsting for Wolfen blood.
Eilif had seen the Lygon in the camp when they had freed Arn, but in their battle armour they seemed twice as large and frightening. She felt her heart beating like the wings of a small bird trying to escape her rib cage.
The challenging roars of her kin tore through the air, and Sorenson’s voice rose above all others.
‘For Valkeryn! For Grimvaldr!’ He drew his sword. ‘And for the mightiest Wolfen who ever lived — for Strom!’ He charged, and was followed by the hundreds of Wolfen horsemen down onto the now bloody plain.
When the two sides came together, the sound rolled across the kingdom of Valkeryn like thunder in the midst of a great storm. The clang of steel and the roars and shouts of the Wolfen and Lygon, and the frightened screams of the horses, was shockingly loud.
Eilif spurred her horse forward, her fear beginning to dull and her training taking over. As she approached the battle, one of the charging Lygon swung a club as wide as she was, at her head. She dragged on her reins, swerving her horse as she lay back nearly flat in her saddle, the club passing harmlessly over her. Lightning quick, she was upright again, slicing her sword down the creature’s back, opening a long, deep wound in the orange-and-black fur.
The infuriated beast screamed, and wheeled, but she was already moving on through the dense press of bodies and flashing steel. All around her, Wolfen and Lygon battled; bloody bits of both littered the ground, and the air was dank with the spray of blood.
She moved closer to Grimvaldr, who was still on horseback, and now ringed by a circle of his best warriors. Sorenson was among them, and she marvelled at his skill and strength, delivering mortal blows that severed snarling heads and removed limbs from brutish bodies.
She became aware of a whistling sound, and then what she thought was the fall of a heavy rain. But then it became clear: it was rain, but of a more deadly kind — Panterran arrows. Thousands were loosed, and of those, hundreds penetrated deep into the bodies of Lygon and Wolfen alike.
At shouts from the generals, the Wolfen dismounted. The horses galloped back to the rear Wolfen line, and each time the deathly whistle heralded the approach of the Panterran’s arrows, the Wolfen raised their shields above their heads, forming a protective roof of steel.
More Wolfen now joined the fray, and the king and the generals quickly organised them into their fighting ranks. Solid walls of Wolfen, five deep, fought in waves.
The first line fought until fatigued, and then fell back behind the next line, and on it went. The generals yelled commands, the arrows continued to fall, and the Lygon kept coming. Then there was more drumming, and the arrow fall ceased. Immediately, in among the tree-trunk legs of the Lygon, the smaller bodies of the Panterran swordsmen whipped through like wisps of smoke, slicing at the Wolfen with their curved blades.
For every Lygon, or dozen Panterran, the Wolfen cut down, twice that many seemed to take their place.
The storm of battle raged for hours, and those Wolfen who paused to draw breath and look to the far hills of the Panterran camps, saw nothing to raise their spirits — the dark tide of bodies continued to pour down towards the Wolfen front lines.
Eilif’s arm was a leaden weight, and as she drove her sword into the chest of one Panterran, another caught her in the back, its curved blade finding its way between the plates of her armour. As she whirled and cut her attacker down, she could feel the warm wetness of her blood soaking her fur.
She gritted her teeth. It may be a while now before I see you, my Arnoddr. Hoping that heaven and Valhalla were the same place, she fought on towards her father.
The head of Strom hung in the darkness — like some horrifying totem — at the top of Goranx’s pike. Holding it aloft with one hand, in his other the monstrous Lygon wielded a massive broadsword, which swept through Wolfen and Panterran alike as he cut a path towards the Wolfen king.
Grimvaldr had his back turned, but Sorenson saw the danger and pushed his way forward, roaring a challenge, his fury unleashed when he saw what the great beast carried.
Amidst the bloody carnage, the giant Lygon heard the challenge, and roared in return. He planted the pike in the earth, and charged.
Sorenson was a solid warrior, but considerably outweighed by his opponent. Now fighting at her father’s back, Eilif feared for her warrior friend as she watched him engage the beast, diving and rolling under the first swing of its blade. In return, his own sword slashed through the air and cut deeply into the back of one of the giant’s legs.
Again and again, the Lygon’s massive blade swung at him, but each time Sorenson ducked and weaved, leaving deep cuts in the Lygon’s hide. The orange-and-black fur was becoming matted with blood.
Sorenson circled the Lygon, his sword held firm and unwavering before him. He reached up, pulled off his helmet and threw it to the ground. He pointed to his brother’s head, impaled on the pike.
‘Your head will soon take its place, mindless brute from the dark lands.’
The Lygon smiled, delighted at seeing the face before him. He responded in a voice that was as deep as Hellheim.
‘I know you, brother of Strom, son of Stromgarde. And now know me: I am Goranx, taker of heads, slayer of armies.’ He swung his blade back and forth, the huge weapon making the air swirl around them, and forcing Sorenson to duck one way, then the other. ‘Did you know your brother begged for my forgiveness?’
The effect of these words on Sorenson was only momentary, but it distracted him enough that he didn’t notice the body of a fallen Wolfen behind him. The Lygon swung his sword, and as Sorenson stepped back, he stumbled.
Goranx took his chance: lunging forward, he brought his sword down again, and this time all Sorenson could do was raise his own sword above his head to try to block the blow. But it was as if a tree trunk had fallen on him — his blade shattered into pieces as the other blade smashed through it and embedded itself into his armour, and deep into the flesh beneath.
Goranx seized Sorenson by the throat and lifted him up, squeezing until the Wolfen’s tongue began to protrude. He pulled him close, and hissed into his face, ‘It was always going to end like this.’ Tossing the fallen Wolfen back onto the ground, he placed one giant foot on Sorenson’s chest, then threw back his head and roared.
In one swift move, he dragged his buried sword from the Wolfen’s shoulder and raised the blade high into the air.
Eilif screamed Sorenson’s name, and the sound of her own voice snapped her out of the paralyzing shock of watching the giant destroy her friend. The monstrous Lygon seemed to be savouring his moment of victory, and it gave her precious seconds to act. Sighting a fallen Panterran archer, she dived towards him, snatching the bow and arrow from his dead fingers.
In one smooth motion, she nocked an arrow and fired. Goranx screamed — in shock more than pain — and he tore out the shaft protruding from his side. He snapped the arrow like a twig between his fingers, and raised his sword to battle the circle of Wolfen elite that now closed in around him.
Eilif rose up to her feet, intending to join them — but staggered, dizzy, the leaden weight of fatigue dragging her back to the ground.
I’ll just rest awhile, she thought, the bloody mud cool against her face.
Strong hands dragged her up to her feet. It was Bergborr.
‘You must come with me immediately, princess.’
She shook her head. ‘No, the king…’
‘It is he who commands me. You are to be kept safe until the far Wolfen arrive. It is his order.’ He swept a hand behind her legs and picked her up.
She was weak, confused. Her eyes had begun to play tricks, and it seemed to her that, as Bergborr carried her through the carnage, from time to time a Lygon would loom up in front of them, then, for no apparent reason, pull back and turn away.
She stared past his shoulder at the battlefield. The Wolfen lines were thinning, but were still holding for now.
Bergborr pulled her to him.
‘We are to enter the forest, and use one of the secret trails to make our way to a hidden camp for the wounded. Soon the far Wolfen will come, and then we will see what the Panterran, and their Lygon mercenaries, are truly made of when our numbers match their own.’
She frowned for a moment, looking from Bergborr, to the forest, and then back to the battle. She could make out the figures of her father and mother, fighting side by side, the giant Lygon slashing and hacking his way towards them. She struggled against him, but Bergborr held her tight, and she had no more energy to fight.
‘Don’t worry,’ he whispered. ‘Those vermin will be no match for the Wolfen elite. But we must hurry.’
He carried her past the castle walls, and she heard a shout go up from inside. There was a roar and the sound of steel — swords being pulled from scabbards, and the pounding of thousands of feet.
As she slipped into unconsciousness, she heard the castle doors being thrown open, and a small smile touched her lips.
She whispered softly, ‘Odin, bless the far Wolfen.’