David Gemmell. Ironhand’s Daughter

On the hillside the Baron shouted orders to the infantry to form a defensive square and retreat down the pass. With fine discipline they gathered, the Baron at the centre.

The Highlanders beat ineffectually against the shield-wall, and the withdrawal began.

Leofric had never wanted to be a soldier, or any kind of fighting man. His loves were numbers, logistics and organization. As he sat his gelding on the north side of the hill he found himself contemplating his future. Never having seen a battle, he was unprepared for the ferocity, the screams and the cries. It was all so … barbaric, he realized.

Once it is over I will return to the capital, he decided. The University had offered him a teaching post in languages. I will accept it, he thought.

‘Do we attack, sir?’ asked the lieutenant at his side. The man had drawn his sword, and seemed eager to lead the five hundred cavalrymen up the steep slope. Leofric glanced up at the shield-wall above.

‘I suppose so,’ he said. ‘The Baron ordered us to make probing assaults.’

‘I understand,’ said the officer. ‘Wasp formation, sting and run. How many should I take, sir?’

Leofric swung in the saddle and gazed at his five centuries. ‘Take three,’ he said. ‘Harry them!’

‘Yes, sir.’

The remnants of Chaldis’ cavalry came galloping down the western slope – no more than thirty men, some of them wounded. An officer rode up to Leofric. ‘We were ambushed, sir. More than a thousand Highlanders were waiting for us in the woods. They are cutting the infantry to pieces.’

At that moment the archers led by the sprinting Cheops came racing down the slope – pursued by, Leofric gauged, some two thousand Highlanders.

‘Son of a whore!’ hissed the officer. ‘Where in Hell did they come from?’

Leofric was momentarily stunned. He had an eye for numbers, and had already estimated there to be around three thousand on the hilltop. Now from nowhere the number of the enemy had risen to six thousand, which was not even within the bounds of possibility.

‘God’s blood!’ said the lieutenant. ‘What now, sir!’

Leofric needed a moment to think. Looking up at the shield-wall above him, the answer came like a blinding revelation. ‘There are no men on the hill-top,’ he said. ‘We are besieging the Highland women!’

All around them the infantry were falling back around the Baron. Raising his arm, Leofric led his cavalry in a charge against the enemy’s left cutting through to where the Baron stood, Leofric leapt from his mount and ran to him. Swiftly he told him of the Highland deception.

The Baron swore. ‘How many do we have left?’ he asked.

Leofric cast his eyes at the sea of fighting men. ‘Two thousand. Perhaps less.’

‘Advance on the hill!’ shouted the Baron. ‘Formation One!’

‘What is the point!’ screamed Leofric. ‘It is over!’

‘It will be over when I’ve killed the bitch!’

With a discipline gained during decades of warfare, the Outland troops re-formed into a fighting square one hundred shields wide and ten deep. ‘Double time!’ shouted the Baron, and the men began to run. Leofric, caught in the centre, had no choice but to run alongside the Baron. On the outer edges of the battle his cavalry were being cut to pieces trying to protect the exposed right flank of the square. Even so, inexorably the phalanx moved up the hill towards the waiting women.

‘I’m coming for you, you whore!’ bellowed the Baron, his voice rising above the clashing swords and the screams of the wounded and dying.

A black cloud of arrows slashed into the advancing line and Leofric could see scores of women loosing their shafts. He felt sickened by it all. The finest soldiers in the empire were now charging a force of wives and mothers.

Behind them the Highlanders were assaulting the troops at the rear of the phalanx, slashing their swords at unprotected backs. Many men turned to face the enemy, and this thinned the square. The Baron seemed unconcerned.

The enemy archers fell back behind the shield-wall and a volley of iron-tipped spears sliced down into the advancing men. The Highlanders were all around them now, a pack of wolves ripping at their flesh. The square began to break up but the Baron ignored the threat, urging his front line on and up.

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