Century of the Soldier: The Collected Monarchies of God (Volume Two) (31 page)

BOOK: Century of the Soldier: The Collected Monarchies of God (Volume Two)
2.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

T
HE
M
INHRAIB
CAMP
was a rough square, a mile and a half to a side. It lay on a gently undulating plain criss-crossed with small watercourses and dotted with copses of alder and willow where the ground was wet. To the east of it a small range of hills rose to perhaps four or five hundred feet, and on these heights a smaller camp of perhaps a thousand men had been pitched to dominate the ground below and safeguard communications with the other Merduk camp to the east. The main encampment was a huge sea of tents bisected by muddy roads, with corrals for the pack animals to the north. South-west of it, on a slight rise, was a long string of scattered woods, perhaps two miles from the first lines of tents. In these woods, the Torunnan army shook out from column into line of battle.

 

 

T
HREE GREAT FORMATIONS
of men emerged from the woods as the sky lightened steadily above their heads. They were late. The approach to the enemy was meant to be made under cover of the pre-dawn darkness, but it had, inevitably, taken longer than expected to reform thirty thousand men in the dark, and now they had two flat and open miles to march at the quick-time before they would come to blows with the Merduks.

Out in front of the main body, batteries of galloper guns under Colonel Rusio had dashed ahead and were unlimbering a mile from the enemy lines. Soon the little six-pounders were barking and smoking furiously, generating bloody chaos in the camp, flattening tents, shattering men.

Behind them the King's formation, eighteen thousand strong, advanced at the double. The battle-line was on average six ranks deep, and it stretched for almost two miles, a dark, bristling, clanging apocalypse of heavily armoured men and horses. The earth shook under their feet, and in the centre the heavy sable-clad cuirassiers were ranged under the banners of the King and his noble bodyguard.

Off to the east, perhaps a mile from the main body, Colonel Aras's five thousand were advancing also, their target the small Merduk camp on the hills. They were to take the camp, and hold the heights against the arrival of any enemy reinforcements. Aras's men were lightly armoured, swift moving, and they trailed streamers of smoke from the slow-match of their arquebusiers, making it look as though they were burning a path across the land as they came.

And behind the main fighting line, another formation. Seven thousand foot and a thousand horse - Corfe's men, in a deep body only some two thirds of a mile long. He was stationed on the left of his line with the Cathedrallers, the Fimbrians were on the right, ten deep, and his dyke veterans were in the centre. Behind them, in the woods, were the hundreds of waggons that comprised the baggage train. Field surgeons and their assistants were busy amid the vehicles setting out their instruments, and crowds of waggoneers were frantically unpacking crates of shot, barrels of gunpowder. Scores of light galloper carts stood in their midst, ready to start ferrying forward ammunition and ferrying back casualties to the rear aid stations. A thousand men worked busily there, and Corfe had also left behind two hundred arquebusiers in case small bodies of the enemy should break through the front lines.

He halted his command when it was a mile from the Merduk camp. The roar of the artillery had begun to intensify. He could see the frenzied activity in the midst of the tented city, officers trying to get clotted crowds of men into battle-line only to have the artillery blow them apart as soon as they had dressed their ranks. The main Torunnan line advanced inexorably to the dull thunder of the infantry drums and a braying of army bugles. It looked as though nothing on earth would be able to stop it. Corfe felt a moment of pure, savage exultation, a fierce, dizzying joy at the sight of the advancing Torunnan army. If there was any glory in war, it was in spectacles such as this, neat lines of men advancing like chess pieces on the gameboard of the world. Once you took a closer look the glory died, and there was only the scarlet carnage, the agonizing misery of men dying and being maimed in their thousands.

The King's formation was passing through the galloper batteries now. The squat guns fired only on a flat trajectory and thus were masked by their own troops as the advance continued. The gunners leaned on their pieces and cheered as their comrades passed by. Had they no further orders? Corfe scowled. Thirty guns left sitting idle. It was an incompetent oversight, and technically he outranked Colonel Rusio, the artillery commander. He reached in his saddlebag for pencil and paper, scrawled a message and sent it off to the idle batteries. A few minutes later, the gunners began limbering their pieces and withdrawing up the slope towards Corfe's command. He could see Rusio in their midst, shouting orders, helmless. The grey-haired officer looked furious. Too bad. Corfe would find him something better to do than sit on his hands for the remainder of the battle.

Farther away on the plain, the main Torunnan formation had halted a scant two hundred yards from the Merduk camp, and the entire battle-line erupted with smoke as the massed arquebusiers let off a volley. A second later, the stuttering crackle of it could be heard. Then there was a huge, formless roar as the line charged, eighteen thousand men shouting their heads off as they slammed into the Merduk camp at a run.

Corfe could see the wedge of three thousand heavy cavalry, the King's banner at its head, forging ahead of the rest. Horses going down already, no doubt tripping on downed tents and guy-ropes. The disorganized unfortunates of the
Minhraib
had no chance. They presented a ragged line, which disintegrated into a howling mob, then a crowd of fleeing individuals. In minutes, the Torunnans had smashed deep into the enemy encampment and were carrying all before them. But now their own lines had become splintered and disorganized. The fighting inside the complex of tents degenerated into a massive free-for-all, and in the thick of it the King and his cuirassiers rampaged like dreadful animated engines of slaughter.
Lofantyr has courage
, Corfe thought.
You have to give him that.

Corfe looked at the right, where another, smaller struggle had begun on the eastern hills. Aras had his men advancing in a perfect line, firing as they went. The Merduks in the hill camp, outnumbered five to one, nevertheless rushed down to meet them. They had few or no firearms and so had to try and engage at close quarters. They were cut down in windrows by exact volleys, and the survivors, a beaten rabble, fled the field. Aras advanced his men up to the hilltops and arranged them for defence.

"I hope he digs in," Corfe muttered. He felt uneasy about the small size of Aras's force. Soon they would have to cover the withdrawal of the King's formation, and if the enemy came in any strength from the east they would have a hard time of it.

"Colonel Rusio reporting,
as ordered
," a voice spat. Corfe turned. Rusio and his guns had reached his position. The older officer was glaring at him, but there was no time to massage his ego.

"Take your guns over to Aras's position and make ready to repel an attack on the hills, Colonel," Corfe said briskly. "How much ammunition is left in your limbers?"

"Ten rounds per gun."

"Then I suggest you send galloper carts back to the baggage for resupply. You'll need every round you can muster in a little while."

"With respect, sir, we seem to be driving them beautifully. I was given no such orders in my briefing. I don't see why -"

"Do as you're damn well told!" Corfe snapped, his patience fraying. "This is an army, not a debating chamber. Go!"

Rusio, Corfe's elder by thirty years, glared venomously again, then spun his horse off without another word and began bellowing at his gun teams. Thirty guns, each pulled by eight horses, pounded off eastwards.

The Merduk camp was wreathed in a pall of smoke. Flames glowed sullenly at its base and tiny black figures flickered in mobs like throngs of ants.
It will be utter chaos in there
, Corfe thought,
as bad for the attackers as the defenders
. But chaos favoured the smaller army. It was easier to control eighteen thousand in that toiling hell than ninety thousand. So far, so good.

It was full daylight now, a dull morning low with cloud, the snow showers coming and going. The trained warhorses of the Cathedrallers were restless and sweating despite the cold; they could smell the stink of battle, and their blood was up. The men were much the same, and the ranks of horsemen buzzed with talk. In the centre of Corfe's line the dyke veterans had their arquebuses primed and ready, laid on the Y-shaped gunrests they had stabbed into the ground before them. And on the far right the black-armoured Fimbrians stood like raven statues, their pikes at the vertical.

Andruw cantered over and doffed his helm. "What's our job in all this, Corfe?" he asked. "To make notes?" He had to shout to be heard over the titanic din of battle.

"Hold your water, Andruw. This thing is only just begun."

Andruw joined his general in staring out at the left of the battlefield, to the west of the Merduk camp. Men were streaming away there, fleeing enemy trying to escape the murderous hell within the tent lines, tercios of Torunnans firing at their backs as they ran. But beyond them there was only a huge stretch of empty hill and moorland, completely deserted.

"You think they'll hit the left?" Andruw asked.

"Wouldn't you? We're killing conscripts at the moment. The professionals have yet to arrive. Aras will hold on the right I think, what with Rusio's guns and the terrain. But the left is another thing entirely. We have nothing there, Andruw, nothing. If the Sultan makes even a cursory reconnaissance, he'll realize that and he'll come roaring down on us there."

"And then?"

"And then - well, we'll have a fight on our hands."

"That's why you've kept us so far back. You think we'll have to move up to support the left."

"I hope not, but it's as well to be prepared."

"Aye. At any rate, the King is doing his job. Another hour and he'll have wiped half the Merduk army off the map."

"Getting into the fight is one thing, getting out is something else."

"Do I detect a note of envy, Corfe?" Andruw grinned.

"It's a glorious charge, but I wish he'd stop and take stock for a minute. The army is hopelessly disorganized in there. It'll take hours to reform them and withdraw." Corfe smiled. "All right, maybe I envy him his glory a little."

"Give him his due, he took them in there like a veteran. I'd best get back to my wing. Cheer up, Corfe! We're making history, after all." And he galloped off.

Corfe sat his restive horse another half an hour. The fighting in the
Minhraib
camp went on unabated, though it had spilled out on to the plain beyond the tents. He could see Torunnan arquebusiers and cuirassiers fighting intermingled, banners flashing bright through the smoke. Beyond the camp a great cloud of men took shape as the
Minhraib
abandoned the tent lines and strove to reform in the open ground to the north-west. Twenty, thirty thousand of them dressing their ranks unmolested whilst the Torunnans were embroiled in the terrible struggle within the camp. The enemy had taken huge losses, but he had the numbers to sustain them and he was bringing some order out of chaos at last. It was time to get out. The Merduk reinforcements would be on the march by now.

A courier emerged from the cauldron, beating his half-dead horse up the slope towards Corfe's line. Corfe cantered out to meet him. The man was a cuirassier. His mount was slashed in half a dozen places and his armour was a pitted mass of dents and scrapes. He saluted.

"Beg pardon, sir -" He fought for breath. "But the King, the King -"

"Take your time, trooper," Corfe said gently. "Cerne! Give this man some water."

His trumpeter handed the man his waterskin and the courier squirted half a pint into his smoke-parched mouth. He wiped his lips.

"Sir, the King wants your men in the camp right away. The enemy is fleeing before him but his own men are exhausted. He wants you to take up the pursuit. You must bring the entire reserve into the enemy camp and finish the buggers off - begging your pardon, sir."

Corfe blinked. "The King, you say?"

"Yes, sir, at once, sir. He says we'll bag the whole lot if only you make haste."

Just then a heavy fusillade of gun and artillery fire broke out on the right. Aras's men had opened up on an unseen enemy below them. Corfe called for Andruw.

"Have a courier sent to Aras. I want to know the strengths and dispositions of the enemy he's firing at, and his best estimate as to how long he can hold them. And Andruw, tell Marsch to take a squadron out on the left a mile or two. I want advance warning if they start coming in on us from there." Andruw saluted and sped off towards the ranks. Corfe fished out his pencil and grubby paper again and used the thigh-guard of his armour as a desk.

"What's your name, soldier?" he asked the battered courier.

"Holman, sir."

"Well, Holman, take a look at the land beyond the Merduk camp, to the north. What do you see?"

"Why, General, it's an army, another Merduk army forming. Looks like it's going to attack our lads in the tents!"

"It's not another army, it's the one you've been fighting, but so far you've only tackled the half of it. The other half has withdrawn and has been reorganizing for the better part of an hour. Soon, it'll be ready to charge back into its camp and retake it. And now Merduk reinforcements have arrived on the right, also. You must tell the King that his position is untenable. I cannot reinforce him - he must withdraw at once. And I want you to take this to General Menin first, Holman. It's absolutely vital this message gets through. The army
must
withdraw, or it will be destroyed. Do you understand me, soldier?"

Other books

The Head of the Saint by Socorro Acioli
URBAN: Chosen By A Kingpin by Shantel Johnson
Night's Honor by Thea Harrison
Long After (Sometimes Never) by McIntyre, Cheryl
Intertwine by Nichole van