shield. He fought with his spear until the shaft splintered, and then he hacked at them with his sword.
To the right of him the line wavered. A huge Scorpion had leapt up to the barricade, hurling back two of the Guard, laying about him with a double-handed axe. Teuthete put an arrow between his neck and shoulder, shooting almost vertically down into him, but there were another three Scorpions taking his place, eager to force that one breach that would undo the defenders.
They met a wall of aviation-grade steel as Meyr rammed them with his shield. With all the thunderous momentum he could muster, he flung all three Scorpions back onto the blades of their fellows. The force of his charge took him beyond the barricade, momentarily in the midst of his enemies. He swung at them with a great bronze-reinforced club that had been a scaffolding bar only two hours before. As the enemy hacked at his mail, he hurled them left and right with monstrous blows, making even the burly Scorpions look like children. Amnon was shouting for him to get back in line and the Scorpions were all about him, halberd-blades seeking his throat, his armpits, any gap in his mail. Meyr finally stepped back, finding the barricade's edge by concentration and memory, and then retreating behind the reformed line of Royal Guard.
There was no shortage of the Scorpions, however. They were still packed solid all the way to the western shore, with no sign that they would ever break off.
'Tirado!' Totho ordered. 'Send for the
The Fly-kinden saluted, and darted off down the river. The archers were drawing and loosing as fast as they could, sending their shafts towards every unprotected piece of Scorpion skin they could see. Still Amnon held firm in the midst of the Royal Guard's overlapping shields as the Scorpions hurled themselves onto the bloody points of the Khanaphir spears. Now Meyr was fighting from behind the line, using his height and reach to swat any Scorpion that gained a foothold on the barricade. At any moment it seemed that the Scorpions must lose their fervour, that the attack would ebb away in a flurry of final arrows, but still they pressed and pressed. The corpses were mounting up and they used them as stepping stones up to the Khanaphir shields. A score of the Guard had fallen and been replaced, and the numbers of waiting reinforcements were now getting sparse. Totho saw old Kham, Amnon's cousin, jerk backwards with a huge gash splitting halfway into his chest, dragging the Scorpion sword from its wielder's clawed hands as he fell.
On board the
'Already?' the Solarnese demanded.
'Oh, yes,' Tirado confirmed. 'Absolutely yes.' He was in the air a moment later, zigzagging back towards the embattled bridge.
Corcoran cursed, thinking,
They cast off, and the
'Get the smallshotters to the rail!' Corcoran called. 'Once we're in range I want every damn one to go off. Cut them a new road back to the Nem: grapeshot and scrapshot all weapons.'
He took out his glass and unfolded it to its full length, raking the western shore for the enemy's disposition. Sure enough, there was a roil of activity there, but the mass of Scorpions pushing to take their place on the bridge was so dense that the crew of the
He spied the smoke from the first leadshotter before he heard the sound, clutching at the rail in sudden fear. The shot went short and wide, though, so far off that it was useless even for ranging.
That first shot from the shore triggered a scatter of copycats, each of them falling short and astern as they failed to take the
He looked upriver, where there was one obvious impediment to making a strafing pass against the Scorpions. He ran astern to his helmsman, a Chasme halfbreed called Hakkon, mentally trying to size up the
'Can we get past the bridge, if we wanted to?' he asked. There was another scatter of leadshot, and he heard the whoosh of water as the misplaced barrage broke up nothing but the river.
Hakkon tugged at his chin. 'Probably,' was all he would say. 'Let me get closer to see.' The bridge had plainly been built to stop large vessels passing upriver, but for the Khanaphir a large ship had a mast and a sail. The
'Close to range!' one of his men called, just as another leadshot raised a great spire of water astern, near enough to rock them.
'Keep moving!' Corcoran shouted. 'Just keep moving!' He ran forward again. There was a constant sporadic pounding from the Scorpion engines now, one or other of them hurling metal every few minutes. A scatter of optimistic crossbowmen were loosing at them, standing knee-deep in the shallows. One of the bolts got as near as to rattle off the hull.
Corcoran watched the Scorpion masses still pushing for the bridge. There was a light rain of bodies dropping from where the fighting was, Scorpions hurled back by the Khanaphir or pushed off by their own side.
'Now!'
This time he remembered to hold on, as every smallshotter detonated at once. The fistfuls of stone and metal shot scythed into the nearest Scorpions, killing dozens where they stood.
'Don't slow down!' Corcoran shouted. 'Under the bridge! Under the bridge!' The arches looked smaller than he had gauged.
The swiftest of them managed a second messy shot, loosing back at the Scorpions, and then the shadow of the bridge covered them, ancient stones closing in around them and gliding by on both sides, close enough to touch.
'Keep reloading!' Corcoran told them, his voice echoing back down the length of the massive archway. 'They'll be there on the other side.'
The boat's sides scraped against stone, but the crew were fending off the bridge with poles and Hakkon had a steady hand. Now they emerged into the dawning daylight, levelling their smallshotters at a surprised Scorpion army.
Totho crouched behind the barricade again, sliding another magazine into his snapbow.
He had heard the thunder of the