it was likely to backfire. The damned stuff was bound to catch the point of a weapon or crack under any heavy pounding, although he had to admit that this armor was as hacked about as any he'd ever seen, and it seemed to have stood the test well. From the look of the wearer, it would probably be a better idea not to make any sarcastic remarks about it, either.
But the ironmongery, however impressive, wasn't the most interesting thing about the group. One of the iron heads' companions was a lightly armed, gods-be-damned
It couldn't be an actual
The iron head in the fluted cuirass held out one hand, palm up to indicate friendship.
'You are Dergal Starg?' he asked.
'Yeah,' the miner snarled. 'Who by the gods wants to know?'
'Ah,' the Northerner said with a weird facial grimace that exposed his teeth. 'The famous Starg personality. Let me introduce myself. I'm Rastar Komas Ta'Norton, Prince of Therdan. King, I suppose now. I believe you once met my uncle under better circumstances.'
Starg slumped suddenly, even his belligerence temporarily muted. Kantar T'Norl had been one of the only damned outsiders who hadn't been totally, by the gods, idiotic. Unlike all too many others, Kantar had always been a voice of reason in the region.
'I'm sorry, Rastar Komas Ta'Norton. I shouldn't have been so abrupt. The loss of your uncle was a terrible blow to the Valley of the Tam.'
'He died as well as could be permitted,' the Northern prince said, 'leading a charge to cover our retreat. We were able to get many of the women and children out of Therdan and Sheffan because of his sacrifice and the willing sacrifice of his house warriors.'
'It's still a great loss,' the miner growled, taking a sip from his now refilled mug.
'Yes, and hardly the way he would have preferred to leave us,' the prince agreed with another of those odd grimaces. 'I suspect that he would have preferred drowning in a wine vat,' he said, and Starg grunted in laughter for the first time.
'Yes, he was a bit of a drinker. It's a recent vice on my own part, of course.'
'Not according to my uncle,' Rastar disagreed. 'He said you could drink a
'High praise, indeed,' Starg said. 'And now that we've covered the pleasantries, where did you come from? The trails are swarming with Boman.'
'The ones to the north may be,' the thing that looked like a
'Who's the
'This is Captain Armand Pahner of the Empress' Own,' Rastar said with yet another of those odd grimaces. 'And calling him a
'Captain Pahner and his 'Imperial Marines' are the reason that there no longer
'
'Um,' the momentarily nonplused cleric said. Then, 'Yes, I suppose that was I.'
'So you came up from the south?' Starg asked. 'What happened to the Boman?'
'Wespar, actually,' Rastar said, and clapped hands in a shrug. 'We killed them.'
'That's a somewhat simplistic explanation,' From noted reprovingly.
'Accurate, nonetheless,' Rastar argued. 'They don't have enough left to burn their dead.'
'They don't burn them, anyway,' Starg said distastefully. 'They
'True,' From said. 'A terrible use of land. Can you imagine what would happen if
'Could we debate social customs at some other time?' the maybe-not-
'Indeed,' Rus From said. 'We brought a caravan through with us. It includes some of the items you ordered from the merchants of Diaspra before the Boman closed the roads.'
'We appreciated that last shipment of pig iron, by the way,' the maybe-not-
'Yeah, well, normally we do most of our trading with K'Vaern's Cove,' Starg said. 'But they were cut off by then. We just had to hope a caravan would make it back from Diaspra, instead.'
'And indeed it did,' From said. 'I'm afraid that few of the mining implements you ordered are included, however. Most of the ones that were complete were converted into weapons. We do have a goodly load of food and wines, spices, and so forth, though.'
'That's all well and good,' Starg protested. 'But we're going to need those tools soon.'
'And they'll be completed in time,' From said dryly. 'With all the weapons we recovered from the Wespar, there's much more than sufficient iron to replace the material we commandeered.'
'And with any luck, we'll be able to get the Boman's attention so centered on us that they won't be a problem between here and K'Vaern's Cove much longer, either,' Rastar added. 'There were none on the south side of the hills. Where are they?'
'Mostly still gorging on the corpse of Sindi,' Starg said. 'But there are many bands just wandering around, some of them quite large. You'll find it difficult to pass through to the Cove, if that's your target.'
'Oh, I don't know about that,' said the maybe-not-
'You see,' Rastar said, 'we're not
* * *
The forces from Diaspra sprawled everywhere around the mines. Most of them were inside the hasty walls the miners had thrown up against the Boman under Starg's direction. Those of them who were not, lightly armored figures carrying incredibly long spears or lances, were busy erecting another camp adjacent to the mining area. They dug with incredible energy and precision, as if they'd been doing it their entire lives.
'What, by all the gods, is this?' Starg asked, rubbing a horn furiously.
'Well,' the maybe-not-
'So you just snuck in and took over?' the mine manager demanded, wondering whether he was angrier at the newcomers or at the guards who were supposed to have prevented such things from happening.
'It's . . . something of a specialty of ours,' the not-