Chaol drew his sword, the freshly polished metal whining as it came free of the sheath. The fingers of his other hand tightened around the handles of his shield. A ruk rider’s shield, light and meant for swiftcombat. The brace that held him in the saddle remained steady, its buckles secure.
The soldiers lining the battlements stirred at the nearing siege tower. The horrors inside.
“They were once men,” Chaol called, his voice carrying over the clamor of the battle beyond the keep walls, “they can still die like them.”
A few swords stopped quivering.
“You are people of Anielle,” Chaol went on, hefting his shield and angling his sword. “Let’s show them what that means.”
The siege tower slammed into the side of the keep, and the metal bridge at its uppermost level snapped down, crushing the battlement parapets beneath.
Chaol’s focus went cold and calculating.
His wife was in the keep behind him. Pregnant with their child.
He would not fail her.
A siege tower had reached the keep walls, and now unloaded soldier after soldier right into the ancient castle.
Despite the distance, Nesryn could see the chaos on the battlements. Just barely make out Chaol atop his gray horse, fighting in the thick of it.
Soaring over the army hurling arrows and spears at them, Nesryn banked left, the ruks behind her following suit.
Across the battlefield, Borte and Yeran, leading another faction of rukhin, banked right, the two groups of rukhin a mirror image swooping toward each other, then back to plow through the rear lines.
Just as Sartaq, leading a third group, slammed from the other direction.
They’d taken out two commanders, but three more remained. Not princes, thank the gods here and the thirty-six in the khaganate, but Valg all the same. Black blood coated Salkhi’s armored feathers, coated every ruk in the skies.
She’d spent hours cleaning it off Salkhi last night. All the rukhin had, not willing to risk the old blood interfering with how their feathers caught the wind.
Nesryn nocked an arrow and picked her target. Again.
The Valg commander had evaded her shot the last time. But he would not now.
Salkhi swept low, taking arrow after arrow against his breastplate, in his thick feathers and skin. Nesryn had almost vomited the first time an arrow had found its mark days ago. A lifetime ago. She now also spent hours picking them from his body each night—as if they were thorns from a prickly plant.
Sartaq had spent that time going from fire to fire, comforting those whose mounts were not so fortunate. Or soothing the ruks whose riders hadn’t lasted the day. Already, a wagon had been piled high with theirsulde—awaiting the final journey home to be planted on Arundin’s barren slopes.
When Salkhi came close enough to rip several Valg off their horses and shred them apart in his talons, Nesryn fired at the commander.
She didn’t see if the shot landed.
Not as a horn cut through the din.
A cry rose from the rukhin, all glancing eastward. Toward the sea.
To where the Darghan cavalry and foot soldiers charged for the unprotected eastern flank of Morath’s army, Hasar atop her Muniqi horse, leading the khagan’s host herself.
Two armies clashed on the plain outside an ancient city, one dark and one golden.
They fought, brutal and bloody, for the long hours of the gray day.
Morath’s armies didn’t break, though. And no matter how Nesryn and the rukhin, led by Sartaq and Hasar’s orders, rallied behind their fresh troops, the Valg kept fighting.
And still Morath’s host lay between the khagan’s army and the besieged city, an ocean of darkness.
When night fell, too black for even the Valg to fight, the khagan’s army pulled back to assess. To ready for the attack at dawn.