'That is impossible!' said Aroisius. 'We cannot house and feed that many men until spring.'
'There won't be a need to,' said Ullsaard, stopping just a couple of strides from Aroisius, a satisfied smile on his face. 'We'll be in Magilnada long before spring. Plenty of beds and food there.'
'What?' Exclamations of surprise came from both Urikh and Aroisius. Urikh stared at Ullsaard, brow creased.
'I never said anything about Magilnada,' said Urikh.
'It's not your decision,' replied Ullsaard. The general turned his eyes upon Aroisius. 'Do we have a deal? We'll share camp for a while and I'll help you take Magilnada.'
One of the chieftains, Lubrianati, strutted towards Ullsaard.
'My blood will be cold before I share air with Askhan dogs,' Lubrianati growled. 'Let's kill these bastards and have done with it.'
Gelthius saw Anglhan wince at this outburst and shared the captain's opinion. All eyes were on the Askhan general. Ullsaard did not even look at Lubrianati. He folded his arms across his chest, his full attention on Aroisius.
'It is my belief that you are in charge here,' said Ullsaard, his words softly spoken. 'You should keep your men in order.'
'I have no need nor desire for Askhan aid in taking Magilnada,' Aroisius said slowly.
'My fucking money was good enough, though?' snapped Urikh. 'You would not even have an army if it was not for me.'
Both Aroisius and Ullsaard darted looks of irritation at the younger man and returned to looking at each other.
'Wait, wait!' Anglhan called out, stepping from the crowd. 'Did you not hear them? They have thirty thousand men!'
'I doubt it!' laughed Barias. 'Any man would be a fool to march so many men in winter.'
'Thirty thousand, a hundred thousand, it makes no difference,' said Aroisius. 'We will reclaim Magilnada for true Salphors without your help. I will return your money, what is left of it, and we will continue without your support.'
'Are you breaking our deal, Aroisius?' Urikh hissed. 'You spend my money and expect to give nothing in return?'
'What is this madness?' exclaimed Anglhan. He turned his words to the assembled rebels. 'Who would turn down such allies? If we wish to take Magilnada, this would seem to be to our fortune.'
There were laughs and shouts of derision amongst the crowd, though Gelthius heard most of it coming from the rebels. The hillmen were oddly quiet, despite the outburst from one of their chieftains. They watched guardedly, trying to guess at the outcome of this confrontation.
A pointed silence ensued, Urikh and Ullsaard facing down Aroisius and his men. A sound startled all except the two Askhans: the distant beats of a drum echoing along the valley. It sounded a quick march, and as it rolled along the cliffs another noise could be heard, a constant rumbling. This soon resolved into the tramping of feet; thousands upon thousands of feet.
The shouts of the sentries were filled with alarm as a line of armoured men appeared at the mouth of the valley, marching in step to the drum. Fifty abreast, rank after rank of legionnaires entered the pass behind their golden icons, spears shouldered, shields held up.
Gelthius watched the reactions of those around him: fear in the eyes of the rebels, save Aroisius, who glowered at the oncoming army; surprise and delight from Anglhan; a mixture of worry and anger from the hillmen and their chiefs; and Ullsaard standing calmly in front of Aroisius with a slight smile.
'Would you like to reconsider your position?' the general said. 'There is no reason we cannot be allies.'
'Listen to him,' said Anglhan. 'Our quarrel is not with the Askhans, but with those toads that would squeeze the blood from Salphoria. What does it matter how we take Magilnada? We are strengthened by this alliance!'
Aroisius rounded on Anglhan, his face a mask of fury.
'You reward my trust with betrayal, you wretched thief!' snarled the rebel leader. 'Has this been your plan all along? Usurper! You have not a single fibre of honour or decency in your whole body. You are a traitor to Salphoria.'
Anglhan did his best to look offended.
'I swore to do all that I could to put Magilnada into your hands, Lord Aroisius,' he said. 'What better way to deliver the city than with the help of these men?'
'Save your lies, you treacherous, spirit-cursed oathbreaker.'
'See sense,' said Ullsaard. 'Listen to your friend.'
'He is no friend of mine,' rasped Aroisius. The rebel leader stared directly at Ullsaard, spittle flying from his mouth. 'There is no alliance here. Take your men and leave.'
Ullsaard's hand moved so fast, Gelthius barely saw the general rip free his sword. In one motion, blade left scabbard and connected with the side of Aroisius's head, splitting skin and skull. As the rebel leader fell back with a cry, Ullsaard followed up, chopping his blade into Aroisius's neck, blood spattering across the general's face and breastplate.
Gelthius glanced down the valley; the legionnaires were barely two hundred paces away.
Lubrianati stepped up with a shout, but his sword was barely out of its sheath when Ullsaard's shield smashed into his face. The Askhan lunged with the tip of his sword, driving it into Lubrianati's left armpit, deep into the chieftain's chest. Lepiris moved out of instinct, but Gelthius grabbed his arm and hauled him back. Ullsaard dragged his sword from the body of Lubrianati and stood at guard, Urikh backing behind him, casting glances over his shoulder towards the advancing column.
'No fighting!' roared Anglhan, stepping in front of Ullsaard to face the rebels; out of weapon reach of both, Gelthius noted. 'Do not throw away your lives. This is a hopeless battle. We cannot win!'
'Listen to your man!' bellowed Ullsaard. 'No harm will come to any man that does not raise his weapon against me. Any that choose to fight will be shown no mercy.'
The sight of the two dead men at the general's feet, and the massed ranks advancing behind him, quelled any immediate attack. The legionnaires stopped at the command of their captains, barely fifty paces from the line of rebels that stretched from one side of the valley to the other. Ullsaard, Urikh, Anglhan and Furlthia stood between the two lines, watching warily.
Gelthius tugged at Lepiris's jacket and the two of them melted away towards the closest cave entrance. Others were doing the same, Anglhan's old crew and bands of hillmen mostly; the line thinned as the chieftains raised their open palms and ordered their followers to stand back. With their numbers growing smaller by the moment, most of the ex-slaves and Salphor brigands threw down their clubs and spears, hurling insults and disgust at those that had backed down.
Calm descended. Ullsaard wiped his sword on Lubrianati's jerkin and sheathed the weapon. He passed his shield to Urikh and placed his fists on his hips, regarding the rebels and hillmen impassively. The general's gaze turned on Gelthius, who froze, gripping Lepiris's arm tightly.
'You!' barked Ullsaard, pointing at Gelthius. 'Are you prepared to swear an oath of loyalty to me? Will you become a legionnaire of Greater Askhor?'
Gelthius looked along the two lines of men. To his right stood the rebels, with their leather jerkins and mauls, their ragged trousers and bent-shaft spears; to the left waited the Askhan legionnaires, with their broad shields, their bronze-tipped pikes, their polished armour and their gleaming standards.
'It's the legions for me, right enough,' Gelthius replied in a quailing voice.
'Good man!' Ullsaard replied with a grin. Still smiling, he took a deep breath and spoke to the others. 'Any man not willing to join me will not be forced to. Those that wish to leave, step forward and make yourselves known.'
There was no movement at first, but then Barias strode up to Ullsaard and spat at his feet. In ones and twos, half of the chieftain's warriors joined him. Others drifted from the crowd, alone or in small groups, until there were several hundred men in the dissident group. Ullsaard nodded and walked back to his army, where his officers met him and they spoke for a short while. At the shout of 'Split column!' the legionnaires divided their line, opening up a space down the middle of the valley.
'Off you go!' Ullsaard shouted cheerfully, waving Barias and the others towards the mouth of the pass.