DargonZine | Volume 20, Number 3 |
aroness Galina Fennell sat in a simple pine chair, staring into
the fire that crackled in a stone hearth. The floor beneath her feet was
dirt strewn with rushes, the building a peasant's dwelling that doubled
as a tavern of sorts. The master of the house, a widow of the civil war
that had raged for nigh on five years, served homemade ale and rented
the rooms upstairs to travellers. Such was the best a humble village
like Balkura had to offer. Such was the best that a loyal vassal of the
rightful queen, Dara Tallirhan, could command, Galina thought bitterly.
In the early days, things had seemed far better. Caeron and his
wife had been much loved by the people, and had been crowned to much
celebration by the Stevenic Master Priest, Cyrridain. But then Aendasia
Blortnikson, Empress-consort of the deceased Beinisonian Emperor
Alejandro VII and Duchess of Northfield, had moved north with her
Beinisonian troops to steal the crown from Caeron. She believed that she
was rightful ruler because the spiteful King Stefan II had named her
heir so that the Stevenic Caeron would not be king. Early battles had
gone well as King Caeron had been an excellent battle commander, but in
the first days of 899 the king had died defending the walls of Magnus,
his capital. Since that time, city after city and castle after castle
had fallen to Aendasia's armies.
Queen Dara, Caeron's wife and heir, and what remained of her
nobles, were trapped in Dargon Keep, besieged for over half a year.
Galina looked up from the fire and towards the north where Dargon Keep
lay. Of course, the lone window that faced that direction was shuttered
against the cool winds. Spring had begun several sennights earlier, but
in the Barony of Fennell, in the dense woods to the south of the city of
Dargon, frost still covered the ground some mornings.
"Can I get you anything more, milady?" The owner of the makeshift
tavern interrupted Galina's line of thought.
"No, thank you." She mustered as much pleasantness in her voice as
she could. It would not do to allow others to see her dark mood. "You
may retire for the evening."
"Thank you, your ladyship." The peasant woman curtseyed and backed
away out of the light cast by the fire.
A familiar voice, deep and rumbling like thunder, met her ears.
"Another fine night God has given us, is it not, your ladyship?"
Galina turned to see the Stevenic priest, Cyruz of Vidin enter the
room with her husband, Baron Boris Fennell in tow. They made for an odd
pair. Cyruz was tall and thin, with a broad brow overtopping a face
constantly creased with a smile so warm that each strand of his thick
brown beard seemed to curl in amiability. Galina's beloved Boris, on the
other hand, was short and as solid as an ancient oak. He had blocky
features and several scars on his face earned in many battles.
The Baroness of Fennell couldn't help but smile at the sight of the
two. "Father Cyruz, you are ever in good cheer no matter what befalls
you. I am oft unable to fathom it."
Cyruz chuckled as he always did and pulled up a chair for himself
and sat next to Galina. "I live in the Stevene's Light; how can I not be
happy?"
"Even with the kingdom in tatters around us? With Queen Dara
besieged in Dargon Keep, and we but a few knights and squires holed up
in one of the least of my villages?"
"Ah, but what grand knights and friends you have with you!"
"I can hardly argue with that," Boris said as he, too, pulled up a
chair and sat near the fire to warm himself. Indeed, the Fennells did
have their most trusted friends and vassals with them in the town: all
of Galina's household knights, and those landed knights of the barony
who owed her fealty directly. Even counting the squires, however, they
amounted to little more than fifty.
"But, Stevene help me, hardly enough to be of much help, are we?"
Galina said.
"Nonsense! Have you not learned what I have taught you these many
months?" Laughing softly and pouring himself a cup of warm posset from
the pot hanging over the fire, Cyruz looked from one Fennell to another.
"Nay, more than months, it has been nigh on two years since the two of
you, and your knights, embraced the Stevene's Light! Put your trust in
that Light. The God of Stevene favours the just!"
Galina could see Boris smiling and nodding at that, and she could
not help but smile herself, as Cyruz's energy and joy was infectious.
She laughed and patted the kindly cleric's knee. "You are always able to
make even the bleakest situation a happy occasion, father."
"It is little wonder some have started to call you Cyruz the holy!"
Boris laughed.
"Holy am I, now?" Cyruz said incredulously. "More of that nonsense
about me meeting the Stevene in Pyridain, I suppose. No matter how much
I tell people I was but a senseless boy at the time, they refuse to
listen!"
From some the words might have sounded angry, but Cyruz was
good-natured about everything, and his voice betrayed no hint of
animosity. The three of them sat in silence for a while after that,
watching the flames slowly devour the log that rested in the hearth.
"This is truly our -- and the queen's -- crucible bell," Galina
said. "But as long as we have good and loyal friends by our side, and
the Stevene's Light shining down from above, we shall weather it."
"You have a new convert's zeal, your ladyship," Cyruz said.
"Treasure that, for it may not last forever."
Boris smirked. "Yes, perhaps you'll one day end up like Katrina
Welspeare, lusting after both men and battle!"
"God forefend!" Galina exclaimed.
"Now, now," Cyruz chided, "have charity, my friends. None are
perfect in their adherence to the Stevene's teachings, even, I dare say,
the Master Priest Cyrridain."
Before any more could be said, the door to the makeshift tavern
banged open as a breathless squire, his tunic soaked through with sweat,
nearly tumbled into the room. He hurried up to Galina and Boris and took
a knee before them. After taking a moment to catch his breath, he
delivered his news.
"Midlord, milady, I fear I bring ill tidings."
"That's hardly something new," Boris said.
Galina shushed her husband, then turned back to the squire. "What
news? Has Lord Connall met defeat?"
She had been expecting news on the battle that Connall Dargon had
engaged in a few days' ride to the east. It was an attempt to circle
around behind the bulk of the Northfield forces and reunite with
Galina's knights, as they had been separated during a skirmish with
Baron Coranabo. She had received word from Connall that he planned to
attempt this gambit three days ago, but had heard nothing after that.
"No, milady." The squire's head dipped as he looked down at the
dirt floor. "I did not make it across the Coldwell, for fresh Northfield
forces move north along the west bank. I recognised the heraldry of the
Baron of Bastonne leading the army. They appeared to be heading west
towards Fennell Keep, milady. I galloped here as fast as I could, but if
they kept the course they were on, they will be between us and Fennell Keep. by now."
Galina's hand went to her throat in a Stevenic gesture of piety.
"Stevene preserve us! Their strength?"
"A thousand at the very least, milady," the squire replied.
"Cephas' boot," Galina whispered. A host that great would
undoubtedly be able to crush Fennell Keep. Then, once it had reinforced
the army under Valeran Northfield at Dargon Keep, the insurrectionists
would likely be able to storm the castle and dash the royalists' hopes
once and for all.
Boris put a hand to his throat. "By the good God, what can we do?"
Firil 29, 902
The next evening Baroness Fennell gathered all of her knights in
the temple that dominated the centre of Balkura, as the makeshift inn
was too small to hold them all, despite the fact there were barely three
dozen of them. Even so, they didn't leave a lot of extra room in the
temple. She was uneasy about using another religion's sacred shrine for
these purposes, but there was nothing for it. She was sure the villagers
were less than pleased themselves, but they weren't about to deny their
baroness access to any of their buildings.
She had spread a map out on the altar at the centre of the temple
and she now traced on it the situation with a thin index finger. "Lord Connall Dargon is somewhere in this vicinity on the far side of the
Coldwell, but we have no way of knowing whether his attack met with
success. A fresh Northfield force approaches Fennell Keep from the east
-- here. For certes they are headed to reinforce Duke Northfield at
Dargon after taking Fennell Keep. Scouts report that they have cut off
our route through the forest to Fennell Keep.
"Either way, we are in a difficult situation. We cannot return to
Fennell Keep to defend it. We cannot go to Dargon itself, either. Even
if we could sneak past Bastonne's army, Baron Talador now fights for the
Duchess of Northfield, and the insurrectionists hold Winthrop Keep. Even
then, we obviously haven't the forces needed to lift the siege."
"Is there nothing we can do?" one of her knights asked. "By the
Stevene, we cannot just stand by and do nothing."
Galina paused for a few moments before answering. She had prayed
long and hard for guidance while the knights were roused and assembled
in the temple. Unfortunately, the good God had not given her a blast of
sudden insight as he had Queen Dara over a year before, which had led to
the end of the first siege of Dargon. Galina had, however, come to a
determination of her own. It was more of an absolute lack of options
than any great stratagem. She hesitated to state it, but knew it was the
only course, save staying here in Balkura and watching the Northfielders
pass by.
"We have but one honourable choice: to attack the Northfield army,
and do what harm we can to them, in hopes that it may purchase for the
queen a better chance, or at least some time."
"Such a course would be nothing short of suicide!" one of her
knights said, to the accompaniment of a handful of his comrades.
Boris, whom Galina had consulted on this matter, stepped forward.
"We will all die one day. Would you rather it be years from now, in your
beds, or now, when we have a chance to save Baranur from the
depredations of the Beinisonian heathens?"
"What are the virtues that Cyruz the bard has taught us lo these
many months?" Galina asked. "Has he not taught us that the Stevene's Light calls us to be courageous, faithful ... loyal? Has he not also
taught us that those who uphold the Stevene's Light will be rewarded in
the next life?"
"But what did the Stevene ever say about God choosing queens?"
"Mayhap the Stevene said nothing directly," Galina said, "but God
did choose Dara to rule this land and I do not presume to question His
will. I did not let the force of superior numbers turn my heart when I
knew what was right, and I won't do that now. We will ride for pride
and honour, knowing that right will prevail as long as there are good
and brave folk alive in this land. We will ride for our hearts and our
faith, knowing that the Stevene favours the just.
"Dara will reign in Baranur; righteousness will reign in Baranur
because we stood firm when others would fall cowering back. And should
we lose our lives in this fight, our blood will have purchased more than
life: a victory of loyalty and honour in a kingdom where fear and greed
shall never reign!
"We have perhaps lost our chance to share in that victory here on
Makdiar, but we have been given a chance to give this victory to
generations to come. Let us make such an end for ourselves that it shall
be sung by bards down through the ages! Let every stride we take as we
charge to embrace the enemy be a resounding thunderclap in heaven for
those who would uphold the good against all odds "
"Hear, hear!" Boris shouted, his voice echoing off the temple
walls.
Several of the knights nodded in approval. A few more audibly
assented. Finally, one of the youngest of the host, Sir Aleksandr Kozulin, raised his fist and shouted, "Let it be so! I'd rather die two
menes from now knowing I did my duty than a thousand years later having
shirked it!
"By Cephas, let us give the traitors something they shall ever
remember Fennell by!"
"And give them that we shall!" Galina slammed her fist down on the
stone slab altar, forgetting its religious nature. "Let us adorn
ourselves as if for a grand tournament and ride out onto the fields of
battle one last time in the name of our God and our queen!"
Everyone cheered, then spilled out of the temple and into the
streets. Those who were not staying in the peasant woman's tavern had
commandeered villagers' homes, and each went to his dwelling to prepare
for the battle the next day. Galina and Boris roused their squires, and
their son Oleg, and ordered that their weapons and armour be polished
and cleaned as for a plaisance.
Long into the night they worked, even going so far as to sew
additions with what cloth they could find to their surcoats and horses'
caparisons such that they would resemble what one would wear to a
glorious tournament. When this was done, there was little point in
sleeping, not when all knew this was their last night alive.
Outside the tavern, Galina could hear Cyruz and the other Stevenic
priests who had accompanied them singing hymns and other songs of praise
and worship. While their followers did this, Galina and Boris bathed one
last time, that they might face their end at their best. Boris pleated
his wife's hair as for a banquet. They spent the remaining bells in a
tender embrace, remembering all the blessings that had been bestowed on
them in their lives.
Firil 30, 902
Galina Fennell waited astride her horse, several paces ahead of her
knights, on the field north of the village of Balkura. Out of the corner
of one eye she could see a farmhouse about half a league to the west.
Beyond the house lay dense forest blanketing the horizon. To the east,
the borders of the forest were even closer. She knew that if she turned
in the saddle she would be able to see Balkura itself several leagues behind her, with the small temple and the wattle-and-daub houses huddled
around it.
Ahead, she could see the Northfield army approaching. Blue banners
flapped in the air. Some of them bore the black falcon that denoted the
presence of Northfield vassals but not the duke or duchess of
Northfield, in which case there would have been a white falcon somewhere
amid the banners. She could see the banner of Baron Bastonne, a blue
field divided in half by a red bar starting in the top-left corner. It
also bore the blazon of a baronial crown, as did Galina's, and stag's
horns, indicating the baron fancied himself a great hunter.
The army was hemmed-in by the forest that had not been cleared as
far back from the road at their position as it was at Galina's. As such,
it was deployed with a very small frontage of troops that Galina judged
would be unable to surround her knights when they charged.
As she expected, the baron's representative, a young noble who
looked as if he'd just eaten something distasteful, cantered away from
the army and towards Galina, who also urged her mount forward to meet
him. As they approached one another, she could see his eyes move over
the line of Fennell knights arranged in one row abreast of each other.
His eyes widened in shock and his voice bore a note of indignation when
the two met.
"What is the meaning of this?" he demanded. "We have arranged in
order of battle to face an army, yet there are but three dozen knights
here!"
"I see your liege-lord has not taught you manners, child," Galina
said mildly. The youth's face reddened and she didn't think it was out
of embarrassment. "Even in times of war it is customary to address
nobles by their proper rank."
The boy looked as if he were about to say something more, then
thought better of it. He glanced back at the Northfield army, which had
now stopped. Galina looked also and was glad to see the troops milling
about in confusion and a degree of disarray rather than prepared for
battle.
"Begging your ladyship's pardon," the young noble said grudgingly,
"what do you intend to do with but a handful of knights versus the
mighty host aligned against you?"
Galina looked from left to right, taking the measure of the army.
They stood about, as if fighting were the last thing they expected to do
today, and well they might. Their ranks were not much wider than her own
knights' frontage, and packed dozens of soldiers deep. The bulk of the
army was positioned behind these front lines. There were archers and
varying degree of men-at-arms, from peasants with farm implements to
well-equipped castle guards bearing shields with their lords' livery and
chain hauberks. Their cavalry were not in their customary places on the
flanks thanks to the forest; in fact, Galina could only assume the
Northfield cavalry was stuck further north, unable to manoeuvre to the
front quickly enough to face her.
"I do not know what strength we have, but I do know this," Galina
finally said after close to half a mene had passed while she surveyed
the troops arrayed against her. "You will not be allowed to leave this
place. These soldiers will not reinforce Duke Northfield at Dargon."
The youth snorted, but did not laugh outright. Instead he looked at
her with raised eyebrow, as if to say he thought her completely mad.
Galina pulled a piece of cloth that she had tucked beneath her mount's
saddle. It was a piece of her gown, the type of favour a non-fighting
lady might give her champion at a tournament. She held it out for the
Northfielder to take.
"You will take this to the Baron Bastonne as a token of my respect
for him, but he will not be allowed to leave."
The boy took it and Galina turned her horse and rode back to her
knights. Each was resplendent in his or her personal heraldic devices,
scrubbed and cleaned to a fine gleam in the morning sun. So too, did
their armour sparkle. Each had their crest proudly displayed on their
great helm. Indeed, each was adorned as if for a tournament, and they
had turned out their best, for this would be the last course they would
ever joust.
As she reached the assembled knights and squires, many of them
nodded to her or saluted with their lances. Cyruz of Vidin and a couple
of other Stevenic priests were also there, having prayed for them
through the night and given blessings while they had waited for the
Northfielders to arrive. Galina's squire trotted up on one of the
baroness' horses. So too, did Boris, his helmet not yet donned, a soft
smile upon his lips.
He took Galina's hand and kissed it, even though it was covered
with a chainmail mitten. "Better to end our lives now while we are still
full of a new convert's zeal, would you not agree, my love?"
Galina could feel tears sting her eyes. She reached out that same
mailed hand and stroked Boris' leathery cheek with it. Yes, in a way it
was good to end thus, before the fires of her love for the Stevene's
word might die out, or a hundred other horrible things might happen. She
only prayed that what she did today would not only save Queen Dara, but
keep her own children safe who were now in Fennell Keep. "Yes, my love.
Before the day is out, we shall be basking, together, in the Stevene's
Light."
One of her children, her eldest son Oleg, was not safe in Fennell
Keep, but rather riding up alongside her, bearing the baronial banner.
He was dressed as a squire, with no devices on his heraldry, and wearing
far less armour than the knights. He had only a chainmail hauberk and
leather leggings to protect him. He looked a lot like his father, with a
square jaw he had set with a look of determination.
"Mama, I am proud to be able to serve the queen thus."
Galina shook her head. "No, Oleg, neither you, nor any of the
squires will accompany us this day. You must take them back to Fennell
Keep after the --"
"No! I'd rather die now with you than live a thousand lifetimes
knowing I abandoned you."
"Oleg," Boris said in a gravely voice. "You have never disobeyed or
dishonoured us before. Do not start now. You must lead the barony for
us."
As with all sixteen year-olds Galina knew, Oleg had no real concept
of what death meant. Galina remembered her own attitude at that age,
thinking she had been invincible, that nothing could harm her. She knew
the same held true for Oleg. Despite his brave words, he did not really
think he would die.
"Fennell
will need a good ruler, and none of your siblings is old
enough for the task," Galina said, "and you are the only one who has
learned of the Stevene's Light with us. You must share that with them."
"Father Cyruz can do that."
"No, you must." Galina fixed her son with a glare that would brook
no contradiction and took the banner from him. "Now take the other
squires to safety ... and keep my great helm in remembrance of this
day."
She motioned for the squire who had first ridden up to her to give
the helm to Oleg. She leaned over to hug her son. She let the tears that
had been welling flow down her face as she kissed him on the cheek. When
she pulled away, she could see that his face, too, was wet with tears.
He did as she commanded, however, and slowly turned and led the squires
away from the battlefield.
Galina sniffed and felt her husband's hand on her shoulder. She
turned to him and they held each other's gaze for a few moments. There
was nothing more for either to say. She kissed him on the lips and
whispered, "May our love burn as brightly in the hereafter."
He then donned his own great helm and took his position with the
other knights. Galina took a short moment to collect herself. She looked
across again at the enemy army. They must have seen the squires leaving
and appeared to have taken it as an indication that the Fennell knights
would soon follow suit. Many were leaning lazily on their spears; others
looked to be chatting with one another. Baron Bastonne had not ordered
any change of formation it seemed. When she looked to his banner, she
could see that several of his knights had left his side and were trying
to cajole the troops back into order, while the baron himself seemed to
be shouting. Galina nodded her head; the time was now. She turned to
face her knights and held her banner high.
"This is to be our end, but let it be such an end as to be spoken
and sung of for hundreds of years in great halls. Let us, God willing,
purchase with our steel and our blood the crown that Queen Dara so
richly deserves to wear. It is better to die for a cause than to
surrender it, and our cause is the defence of our true queen!"
The knights, barely three dozen of them, raised their lances and
cheered as Galina spoke the words. She held her war hammer aloft and
rode down the length of her assembled host, her voice growing louder and
steadier with each pronouncement she made.
"King Caeron was denied his rightful inheritance by King Stefan,
but the Stevene's Light allowed him an opportunity to take that which
was lawfully his. Let us not squander that opportunity he was given, by
our cowardice on this field! Though Caeron, our great king, was laid low
by the knives of traitors at Magnus, his queen and son live on to
continue the Tallirhan line!"
The knights cheered again, more loudly. Galina turned her horse and
galloped along the line of knights. "Follow me into the warm embrace of
the Stevene as he will greet us in death! Follow me for the queen! For
Baranur!"
"For the queen!" some knights shouted; others bellowed, "Long live
Queen Dara! Long live House Tallirhan!"
"For Fennell!" Galina was now screaming at the top of her lungs.
Her horse reached the middle of the line and reared up on its hind legs.
The destrier's powerful hooves then pounded upon the earth and Galina
surged forward, the faithful knights of Fennell close behind. Galina
focussed her gaze on the soldiers across from her, wearing the blue
livery of Northfield, her vassal Bastonne, and the other houses of that
duchy that seemed to blend into one another. Their eyes were wide with
shock and with fear. Bowmen fumbled frantically to bring their weapons
to bear, while other soldiers drew swords and other hand weapons. Some
broke and ran while the charging knights were still many strides away.
A deep, melodious voice, like snow and boulders rumbling down the
side of the Skywall Mountains, filled the air. Galina's heart began to
beat yet faster, and she felt lighter in her saddle as Cyruz the bard's
sacred chant of praise reached her ears:
Prostrate I adore thee, deity unseen,
Who thy glory hidest 'neath these shadows mean;
Lo, to thee surrendered my heart is bowed,
Tranced as it beholds thee, shrined within the mist.
Taste and touch and vision to discern thee fail
But hearing only we may here prevail.
I believe all that the Light hath told;
What the Stevene hath spoken that for truth I hold.
The other priests who had come to the field to bless the knights
joined in the song. It seemed as if all other sound from the battlefield
was no more, for Galina could only hear that beautiful polyphony as she
neared the enemy soldiers. Time seemed to move slowly as she closed, and
she was filled with a deep and abiding calm. She bore no lance but could
see out of the corner of her eye the lowered lances of her comrades. The
first rank of soldiers crumpled before her as lances pierced flesh and
bodies were trod underfoot.
Time returned to normal, and rather than the sonorous chant of the
Stevenic priests, Galina's ears were filled with the terrible sounds of
battle. Men and women screamed, shouted, and moaned. Metal clashed with
metal and hundreds of feet pounded the ground. Galina swung her war
hammer again and again. A small band of soldiers tried to pull her from
her horse. She shattered the skull of one with the hammer, then impaled
another through the eye on the backswing with the point that balanced
the hammer head. Her horse reared up and bore another to the ground
under sharpened, flailing hooves, and others fled. Almost as soon as the
first engagement had begun, it seemed to be over. Enemy soldiers were
fleeing in a disordered mob. Galina knew too well that the battle was
far from over.
She called to her knights to reform a line and prepare for another
charge. They obeyed, forming a neat line with Galina at the centre. She
could see that the Northfielders were scrambling to get into better
position to fight, now that she was in amidst them.
"Charge! For the Stevene!" she screamed and launched her mount
forward once again. This time, arrows started to whiz through the air
past her as she and her knights surged towards the enemy. She heard a
few cries of pain as one or two of her knights were wounded by the
shafts. They pressed on nevertheless, and were quickly in amongst
Northfield troops once again. Galina laid about her with her war hammer
with all the might she could muster. Men and women fell to her blows one
after another.
She turned and saw Aleksandr Kozulin being pulled from his horse.
Once he was on the ground, the soldiers pinned him and, pulling up his
gorget, slashed his throat. Bright red blood spurted out and the knight
soon stopped struggling. Galina charged the band of soldiers and her
horse's powerful body knocked several to the ground then trampled on
them.
Charge after charge she led her knights on, leaving bodies strewn
all across the roadway and grassland that separated it from the trees.
More and more of the brave souls she led fell to arrows and spears as
the morning progressed. Galina had no concept of how much time passed,
nor did she have time to consider, as Baron Bastonne finally started
moving his own knights into position. Without trying to form into a
line, or even take stock of how many men and women still fought on her
side, she charged towards the enemy knights before they were properly
arranged, screaming a battle cry as she went. At least a few hooves
pounded after her, and once again the melodious polyphony of Cyruz and
the priests' chanting reached her ears. The sound filled her with
renewed vigour, and she lifted her tired arm to smite one of the enemy
knights with her hammer. The man's helmet caved in and he toppled from
his horse. His fellows, armed with lances in preparation for a charge,
were ill prepared to meet this sudden attack. Galina parried a clumsy
attempt to use a lance as a club, then slammed the sharp point of her
weapon into her opponent's throat.
Confusion swirled around her, the world descending into a cacophony
of noise, the stench of blood and faeces, and the constant shift of
shapes as knights rode about her and slashes and parries were traded. At
one point, she somehow managed to break free of the enemy knights and
onto a small rise in the land. She could see bodies strewn in every
direction. She recognised the heraldry of one or two of her knights here
and there, scattered and surrounded. They hewed and slashed with their
weapons, dropping many of their enemies, but in turn, they were hauled
down from their horses or cut down by enemy knights.
She could see one of the priests, dressed as for a Stevenic
celebration in a church, lying dead a short distance away amidst the
bodies of enemy soldiers. She was deathly tired, such that she could
barely hold her weapon or her banner, but she resolutely refused to drop
either. Mustering up the last of her energy, she whispered to herself,
"May our love burn as brightly in the hereafter," then spurred her horse
towards the nearest group of enemy knights.
Galina lay on her back. She could see the sky and noticed that the
sun was not yet at the midpoint; no, it had crossed the midpoint and was
already on its descent into night. She struggled to move, but found that
she could not. From the waist up she felt as though she'd been stabbed a
hundred times, though from there down she felt nothing. She wanted to
sleep; her eyes started to flutter shut. But what of the battle? She
opened them again. She was certain all of her knights were dead; she
remembered that much of the battle. But what harm had they inflicted?
A dark shape blocked out the sun. She looked towards it, and as it
drew nearer recognised the heraldry of Baron Bastonne adorning a dirty
surcoat. The man knelt down next to her.
"The day is yours, milady," he said.
Galina realised this was the baron himself. He was younger than she
had expected. "W-what do you mean?" She could barely speak. Her mouth
tasted of blood and her throat felt as though a strong hand were choking
her.
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