Now, beneath the hooves of the trapped horse she firmed the net until it was as strong as the steadiest ground, taking away some of the mage-threads from the sides to do so. When nothing untoward occurred, she took more of those threads, using them to raise the level of that surface, slowly. carefully, so as not to startle the horse. One by one she rewove those threads, raising the platform thumblength by agonizing thumblength.
She was shaking and drenched with sweat by the time she got it high enough, and just about at the end of her strength. When a clatter of hooves on rock and an exultant shout told her that Gerrold had gotten his mount back onto safe ground, she had only enough energy left to cling to her saddle for the last few furlongs of the journey.
* * *
'Right now,' Idra said quietly, stretched out along a hill top next to Tarma, 'The old war-horse should be giving them a good imitation of a tired old war-horse.'
The hilltop gave them a fairly tolerable view for furlongs in any direction; they were just beyond the range of Kelcrag's sentries, and Kethry was shielding them in the way she had learned from the example of Moonsong k'Vala, the Tale'edras Adept from the Pelagiris Forest-making them seem a part of the landscape-to mage-sight, just a thicket of brinle-bushes. In the far distance was the pass; filling it was the dark blot of Kelcrag's forces.
At this moment -- as he had for the last two days -- Leamount was giving a convincing imitation of a commander truly interested in coming to an agree-ment with his enemy. Heralds had been coming and going hour by hour with offers and counter-offers-all of this false negotiation buying time for the Hawks to get into place.
'Well, it's now or never,' Idra said finally, as she and Tarma abandoned their height and squirmed down their side of the hill to join her company. 'Kethry?'
Kethry, on foot like all the rest, nodded and joined hands with her two mage-partners. 'Shield your eyes,' she warned them. 'It'll go on a count of five.'
Tarma and the rest of the Hawks averted their eyes and turned their horses' heads away as Kethry counted slowly. When Kethry reached five, there was a flare of light so bright that it shone redly through Tarma's eyelids even with her head turned. It was followed by a second flash, and then a third.
From a distance it would look like the lightning that flickered every day along the hillsides. But Leamount's mages were watching this particular spot for just that signal of three flickers of light, and testing for energy-auras to see if it was mage-light and not natural lightning. Now Leamount would break off his negotiations and resume his attacks on Kelcrag's army, concentrating on the eastern edge. That would seem reasonable: Kelcrag had stationed his foot there; they might be vulnerable to a charge of heavy cavalry. Leamount's own west-ern flank was commanded by Lord Shoveral, whose standard was a badger and whose mode of battle matched his token; he was implacable in defense, but no one had yet seen him on the attack, so Kelcrag might well believe that he had no heart for it.
He was, one hoped, about to be surprised.
One also hoped, fervently, that Kelcrag's mages had not noticed that it was mage-light and not light-ning that had flickered to their rear.
Warrl said soberly.
'I hope you're right, Furface,' Tarma replied, mounting. 'The more surprised they are, the more of us are going to survive this.'
At Idra's signal, the Hawks moved into a disciplined canter; no point in trying too hard to stay undercover now.
They urged their mounts over hills covered only with scraggy bushes and dead, dry grass; they would have been hard put to find any cover if they'd needed it. But luck was with them.
They topped a final hilltop and only then en-countered Kelcrag's few sentries. They were all afoot; the lead riders coldly picked them off with a few well-placed arrows before they could sound an alert. The sentries fell, either pierced with arrows or stumbling over their wounded comrades. And the fallen were trampled -- for the Hawks' horses were war-trained, and a war-trained horse does not hesitate when given the signal to make certain of a fallen foe. That left no chance that Kelcrag could be warned.
Ahead of the riders, now stretching their canter into a gallop, was the baggage train.
Kethry and her two companions rode to the fore-front for the moment. Each mage was haloed by one of Kethry's glowing mage-shields; a shield that blurred the edges of vision around a mage and his mount as well. It made Tarma's eyes ache to look at them, so she tried not to. The shields wouldn't deflect missiles, but not being able to look straight at your target made that target damned hard to hit.
The two hedge-wizards growled guttural phrases, made elaborate throwing motions -- and smoking, flaming