remarkable speed, had hiked ten miles from the army camp, Ankhar detected the smell of smoke. They came across a low ridge to see an entire forest smoldering, blackened trunks still casting up clouds of smoke. Only the moist ground and verdancy of the forest had prevented a major conflagration from erupting.

And there, looming against the backdrop of the blackened landscape, rose the elemental king. His cavernous eyes, flaring like the coals of the Abyss, burned brightly as the half-giant boldly stepped within view of the monster. Ankhar raised his emerald-tipped spear, waving the weapon over his head in a taunt.

The elemental king roared, the sound so ferocious it was like a physical assault. Ankhar roared back challengingly, and the conjured creature charged him.

The ground shuddered underfoot as the great creature advanced upon the half-giant. Whirlwinds swirled around its massive legs, tearing up trees and sending great spumes of water into the air as it cut across the mountain stream. It roared closer, rearing high, the sound of its cries echoing back from the ridges, filling the valley with noise…

Until Laka opened her small, ruby-encrusted box.

CHAPTER TWENTY — FOUR

THUNDER ON THE MOUNTAIN

The battlefield lay where the Garnet Mountains flowed down onto the plains, some fifty miles east and south of Solanthus. The few villages in the area had been long abandoned. Finally the maneuvering was done, the units in place for a decisive showdown. Morale was high on both sides, and with the two-year siege behind them, the Solamnics and Ankhar’s army were equal in one respect: they were ready for the matter to be resolved.

Horses kicked and whinnied with eagerness, the drooling warg wolves snarled, and men, goblins, ogres, and dwarves sharpened their blades and through narrowed eyes, studied the enemy’s positions. All the warriors on both sides sensed there would be no more marching, no more feints and impasses and skirmishes. A great battle was nigh.

The two armies formed opposite each other alongside the northeast fringe of the Garnet Mountains. Ankhar’s army, facing north and west, held its left flank anchored on the precipitous slopes of a rocky ridge. Jaymes, in turn, maintained his front toward the south and east, and by the use of light cavalry and skirmishers, intended to keep his right flank flexible enough to respond to any threat that might materialize in the high country.

The Palanthian Legion had swelled the ranks of the Solamnic force to an unprecedented number. The three knightly armies were well rested. Nearly two months had elapsed since the crossing of the Vingaard, and the time had been put to good use. Many of the wounded had recovered and been brought forward to rejoin the army. Stocks of arrows and replacement weapons had been expanded by the diligent work of the armorers until all units were fully equipped. One enterprising quartermaster had sent away as far as Kalaman to purchase a herd of more than six hundred good, strong horses.

Bloodgutter, meanwhile, had sent urgent messages to the wilds of Lemish, promising booty, land, and slaves to new volunteers. As a result, Ankhar was able to welcome reinforcements totaling hundreds of ogres and thousands of goblins.

The first day on the field, the armies watched each other warily, jockeying with slight changes in position, skirmishing with scouts and light cavalry although neither commander made a move to open up major hostilities. The lancers on their fleet horses brawled with Rib Chewer’s goblins on their warg wolves for much of the afternoon, the fracas fading away with the daylight. No great change resulted, but riders on both sides returned to their camps boasting of enemies slain and new glories attained.

On Ankhar’s part, he was content to wait and see what his opponent tried to do while, at the same time, waiting for even more reinforcements to come up from the south. They continued to arrive-a hundred and fifty hobgoblins from near the Lords of Doom, several wandering tribes of gobs marching out of the Garnet range. Most important to the half-giant, he was secure in the knowledge that the king of the elementals was once more his prisoner, his slave to command. That imposing monster, for now, remained trapped in Laka’s ruby box. But when the time was ready-and that time would be very, very soon-the king would be released to once more walk upon the world, to wage war, and to destroy.

Jaymes, to Ankhar, was making a show of useless busy work: His troops were deployed. They dug ditches and erected barriers of sharpened stakes. But the half-giant didn’t realize the real purpose was to distract him from activity on the western slope of a low ridge overlooking the field, a slope concealed by its crest from enemy observation.

It took the better part of two days for a team of Kaolyn Axers to chop through the pine forest on that concealed slope and clear a road up to the flat ridge that rose to the extreme right of the Solamnic Army’s position. The work was grueling, but Jaymes had chosen this ridge as the best firing position for the bombards, and his troops knew better than to question their commander’s judgment.

So the dwarves had chopped down hundreds of trees, while a whole regiment of militiamen-armed with picks and shovels instead of swords-followed along, digging and ditching and leveling out the path so the huge freight wagons could be hauled up into the foothills. Planks and logs were laid to smooth out the roughest parts of the road, while sturdy retaining walls were constructed on the steepest stretches, ensuring even a steady rainfall would not be enough to wash out the newly created road-a road created for a single, critical purpose.

General Weaver pleaded for his Rose Knights from the Army of Palanthas to have the honor of striking the first blow in the morrow’s battle, and the army commander agreed.

“Thank you, my lord-and I want you to know that this request comes not just from me, but from every one of my men. Too long we have waited in our city while the war raged across the mountains. We are eager to make our own contribution to the cause of Solamnia.”

“That’s a pretty speech,” Jaymes remarked. “I have no doubt that your men will fight as well as you talk.”

“I want you to know, sir,” said Weaver, “that we knights of Palanthas have chafed for a long time under the command of the lord regent. He might hold his title by birthright, but to us he does not embody the tenets of the knighthood. You, on the other hand, are a warrior that any man would feel honored to serve. Your example makes us believe that, perhaps, there’s hope we will once again have a nation to call our own.”

Then the general drew himself up to his full height and clapped a fist to his chest. “My lord,” he declared, mustache quivering, “Est Sularus oth Mithas!”

At the eleventh hour, the army was further augmented by a regiment of heavy infantry dispatched from Kaolyn. Wearing black plate mail armor, carrying an assortment of axes and wicked-looking battle hammers, the fighters marched into the camp singing a battle song and were cheerfully welcomed by the Solamnics and all of their allies.

“I think old King Metast wants to protect his source of income,” Dram noted with a chuckle. He had told Jaymes about the transaction for Kaolyn steel, of course.

“We can use their steel, and we can use their numbers,” the lord marshal noted with pleasure.

At last, the road up the back of the ridge was completed, and the heavy wagons were hauled to the crest- though, for the time being, they parked just below the summit on the west side to avoid being seen from the enemy lines. The real battle would begin in the morning.

The long night passed quietly. Those who knew how to write penned missives for home and helped their less literate comrades to compose brief notes as well.

Jaymes himself walked calmly among the men of all four wings of his armies, speaking to knights and militia volunteers, lords and squires. He praised the work of the Rose Knights, congratulated the men of Solanthus and the Sword Army on their accomplishment in liberating that long-besieged city, encouraged General Dayr and the battered warriors of the Crown Army. The Freemen, his personal bodyguards, walked beside him and remained vigilant while the commander relaxed, joked, and shared a drink or a piece of bread with the men as he passed among them.

The lord marshal himself made sure to get an unusual amount of rest, turning in before midnight and ordering that he not be disturbed until two hours before dawn. He pulled a thin blanket over himself, stretched out on his

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