‘Lieutenant awake?’ he called back.
‘Not just now, Sergeant,’ Arken reported.
‘Then I reckon I do,’ he stated.
‘We offer you the chance to surrender,’ said the woman. Varmen stared. Her voice was exactly as he had imagined. He had always had a thing for women with good voices. After a moment he realized that the awkward pause in this conversation was him.
‘Go on,’ he stated, mostly to get her to keep talking.
‘You think that-’ the Dragonfly man started but Varmen cut him off with an angry motion of his gauntlet. ‘Not you, her. Don’t interrupt the lady.’
The angry, injured-pride expression on the man’s face made it almost worth being stuck out here about to fight off the hordes.
‘You believe your army is coming to save you,’ the woman said. Varmen tilted his head up a little, listening.
She had stopped speaking, and he realized he had been nodding along without actually absorbing any of the words. ‘I suppose you think that scares me,’ he hazarded.
‘You have your once-only chance to cast your weapons down,’ the Dragonfly man snapped, icy voiced. ‘I suggest you take it.’
‘Bring your worst,’ he finished.
‘Oh, we shall,’ the Dragonfly man promised. Varmen could see him raging inside, desperate to bring the fight to the Wasps.
‘Bring your worst!’ Varmen repeated, ‘’Cos we’re the best — Pride of the Sixth!’
The words rose up from behind him in a chorus of imperial solidarity.
The man stalked away, and Varmen was mildly surprised that one of the Fly-kinden didn’t put an arrow in his oh-so-inviting back. The woman regarded him for a moment more, that very-nearly-almost-amused look still on her face, and then followed after. Varmen carefully stepped backwards until he could see Pellrec from the very corner of his visor.
‘How’d I do?’ he muttered.
‘Oh, I’m amazed the Emperor didn’t come round and hand out medals,’ the other sentinel told him. ‘What now?’
‘We fight.’
‘And when the Sixth doesn’t come, like she said?’
‘Feh.’ Varmen shrugged. ‘And why won’t they come?’
‘Well. .’ There was a pained pause, but Varmen wouldn’t look at him, so Pellrec went on, ‘There was the little thing about the whole Grand Army of three principalities currently beating on the Sixth like a man with a sick slave.’
He heard a subdued rustle of laughter as his tone rescued a little morale. Pellrec wasn’t fooled. Pellrec never was. Still, Pellrec would stand and fight alongside him whether he believed it or not. Sentinels didn’t break. ‘Pride of the Sixth,’ Varmen murmured to himself.
‘And here they come,’ Tserro said, and to his credit his voice was steady. Varmen dropped into his fighting stance, keeping his shield up, and the arrows began to arc into the firelight. He felt an impact on his shoulder, two or three on his shield. A sharp rap knocked his head to one side but he brought it back, waiting. The gash in the crashed heliopter was mostly filled with Varmen and his sentinels, and it would be a fine archer who could spin an arrow into a narrow eyeslit or up under an armpit at the range they were shooting at. Varmen heard a shout of pain from behind him, an errant missile catching one of the Fly-kinden in the leg after clipping Pellrec’s pauldron. Another splintered on a sentinel’s halberd blade.
‘Spears now,’ Tserro said. He must have been crouching high aloft, just behind and beside Varmen’s head.
‘Brace!’ Varmen shouted. Arrows began to dance the other way, the short shafts that the scouts used. Fly- kinden weren’t good for much, in Varmen’s estimation, but they were decent shots when their nerve held.
The firelight caught movement, and then the Commonwealer soldiers were on them. They came running: lithe spearmen with thin leather cuirasses, archers in amongst them with arrows to the string, a rushing rabble of golden-skinned faces. Even as they hit the firelight, half of them were airborne, the wings of their Art flaring from their backs and shoulders, launching them up and forward. Their arrows kept coming, loosed on the run or on the wing. One struck Pellrec’s breastplate and bounded up into the mail under his chin, sticking and hanging there like a beard. Varmen heard several cries behind him as the missiles punched through the banded armour of Arken’s medium infantry. The Wasps were returning shot for shot. The light arrows of the scouts were cut through with crackling bolts of gold fire. Varmen saw a half-dozen of the Commonwealers go straight down.
‘
Abruptly as they had come, the Dragonflies broke off the attack, disappearing into the darkness, chased by a few hopeful arrows. Varmen made a quick count and saw a score of bodies.
‘What’s our losses?’ he called back.
‘Two scouts, one infantry,’ came Arken’s dutiful voice. ‘Two others wounded.’
‘They’ll be back,’ Pellrec said.
‘Oh, surely.’ Varmen shrugged his shoulders, settling the plates back into place. Pellrec murmured to him and he added, ‘They’ll take a few shots at us now. . hope we’ve forgotten about them. Stay sharp.’
‘Sergeant. .’ Something in Arken’s tone promised complications.
Varmen sighed. ‘Watch the front,’ he told Pellrec and ducked into the wrecked heliopter. ‘What? What