The blows to the gate echoed throughout Nightwish. Alwynn hoped that the Elves evacuated from the caverns could not hear. He could not shake the image of tiny Elven children clinging to their parents and weeping.
Please, dear Ellos
, Alwynn prayed,
keep them safe
.
Travin jumped. New screams, but not from the gates, and not from the Warspiders. These were agonized cries of Gwars echoing up from the aquifers. Those who dared to come by watercraft were now feeling the sting of legions of archers' arrows. Hundreds would die before the first Gwar entered Nightwish by water.
KERRRâRACK!
The center gate fell from its hinges. Massive hammer-wielding Gwar poured in, followed immediately by Warspiders. Travin watched them come to a halt a few yards from the stalagmites. Then he watched them slowly begin to advance.
Wait,
Travin continued to will his troops.
Wait until they are committed.
And they were. The Gwar soldiers and Warspiders began to gather steam as they plunged forward, clambering over the spikes of stone.
“Curse them!” Travin growled under his breath. The other gates fell, one by one. And Warspiders were climbing to the cavern ceiling and advancing above the Elves.
Leave them to the archers and cannons,
he told himself.
Watch theâ
A huge, red-legged Warspider bearing a Drefid plunged its foreleg down a mere foot from Travin's position. The Elven forward commander shrugged. His spear was meant for a spider, but the opportunity was too good. He heaved the weighted shaft right at the Drefid, piercing his side and lifting him bodily from the saddle. “NOWWW!!” Travin yelled. He lifted a war horn to his lips and loosed several blasts.
His spearmen responded, and suddenly it seemed to the enemy as if the stalagmites had come to life. Gwar, spider, and Drefid fell dead in bunches, their wide-eyed corpses never realizing what had killed them. But more and more enemy soldiers vomited from the gates. Travin's archers did their duty. Hundreds of Gwar fell, but several hundred followed. And the Warspiders, blast them, continued to take to the ceiling.
Travin could only hope the layadine cannons were ready. He clambered up to the top of his stalagmite and yelled, “Infantry, collapse . . . NOW!!”
The enemy forces that still lived and continued to meander through the stalagmites found themselves suddenly caught in the jaws of an Elven vice.
Glisith had been trained to use the layadine cannon only three years prior, shortly after his enrollment in Berinfell's army. Being among the many Elves born and raised solely in Nightwish Caverns, having never seen the Land of the Sunâas it was calledâfor more than a few hours a week, he was eager to be rid of the enemies of his forefathers and get topside, for good. But having rarely seen the outside world, he had also never seen the enemy, knowing them only through the stories told to him by his parents at table. But what his eyes saw tonight from his perch on one of the watchtowers made his finger slip from the trigger.
Bursting from the tunnel entrances on the south side of the city like an entire colony of ants erupting from a flooded anthill came a black wave of Warspiders emanating in all directions. Glisith could only gape as wave upon wave spread out from the black hole, the beasties covering the walls like a plague.
“What are you doing, flet soldier?!” The authoritative voice of a frantic Elven commander snapped young Glisith from his stupor. “Fire! Fire! FIRE!!”
Suddenly recalling the practiced form of his rank and duty, Glisith lowered his goggles, took aim down the long barrel, centering on the very middle of the tunnel, and held his breath. Then he squeezed the trigger.
Though the cannon was anchored securely in the floor of the watchtower turret, the blast rattled his jaw and made his ears ring. Glisith sat stupefied in his gunnery chair, watching his charge zip clear across the cavern and explode in a spray of white ash deep in the heart of the tunnel. He had never actually fired live rounds before. A thunderous resounding of dozens of other cannons joined his own, charges exploding in the tunnel, the entire space shaking with explosions.
“Reload!”
Glisith's ears were ringing. He followed his commander's orders and took the wrapped load from his spotter below. He spun open the hatch wheel, working the gears as quickly as he could, and then shoved the round inside the chamber.
Layadine in the front, propellant in the back
. Then he slammed the door shut, and with uncommon efficiency he screwed back the gears, sealing the housing.
“Fifteen degrees!” ordered his commander.
The spotter worked a giant winch below Glisith that moved the cannon's vertical angle. Slowly, the cannon adjusted, Glisith now aiming at a patch of unaffected Warspiders and their riders climbing up the wall, nearly out of reach of the dremask lights. The shock of the first round over, Glisith felt his training take over, and he grabbed the trigger intentionally . . . then squeezed.
Travin ducked as Gwar tumbled from their dissolving Warspiders, many falling to their deaths from the heights above, smashing into the South Bridge, others broken on the stairs or drowned beneath the weight of their armor in the river below. Still other Gwar rolled down the steps as their mounts squealed, collapsing underneath them, the Warspiders' innards hissing and popping as the deadly layadine powder went to work on the one thing it was harvested to kill: spiders. Any Gwar who managed to live through the ordeal met a swift end as Travin's forces laid waste to everything in their path.
THE LAYADINE cannons continued to pound away at the gaping hole in the far wall, through which wave after wave of Warspiders poured into the giant, subterranean home of the Elves. But no sooner did the Warspiders crest into view than the white powder rendered them helpless, their bodies bursting, wracked with horrific tremors. Likewise, their Gwar, and now Drefid riders, tumbled into the spear-armed flet soldiers. Row upon row of the warriors jabbed and skewered the disoriented enemy combatants, dashing Gwar and Drefid bodies into the rocks and river below. In the first thirty minutes of fighting, not a single Warspider, Gwar, or Drefid made it into the heart of the city.
Alwynn stood in awe, watching his brethren hew the Spider King's forces and doing so with so few losses of their own.
“Why so surprised, cousin?” Manaelkin mocked. “Where is your faith?”
Alwynn turned to address the chief council. “In Ellos,” he replied. “Where it has always been. We are witnessing providence, divine intervention.”
“Ellosâ” Manaelkin stopped his words. It wouldn't do to blaspheme with other soldiers around. Still, he could not remain silent. “Of course Ellos the Mighty is always our source of . . .
inspiration
. But now we see the might of Elves at its finest. We have anticipated the Spider King's every move. They are coming as swine to the slaughter.”
Alwynn winced. He was glad to see the Elves triumphing, but it was not a joy to see the enemy die. And there was something troubling him. “Manaelkin,” he said. “Does it seem at all to you that this victory is too easy?”
“P-p-what?” Manaelkin faced the high cleric. “Too easy? Victory is victory!”
“I wonder,” said Alwynn. “And I'm worried. Have you ever seen such a force in all your life? Not even Berinfell saw such numbers.”
“And yet you questionâ”
“It is a massive army, but why wouldn't the Spider King himself lead this army? This should be his most glorious victory.”
“He didn't lead the Berinfell invasion, either,” retorted Manaelkin. “So what then?”
“He attacked Berinfell when we Elves were our strongest,” Alwynn explained. “Perhaps he let his Drefids command out of fear for his own skin. But an attack here on a sun-deprived remnant of hiding Elves; wouldn't he come to glory in his final triumph?”
Manaelkin for once did not have an answer.
“And yes,” Alwynn went on, “this is a massive enemy army, but what if the Spider King's forces have grown and increased in the same percentages that ours have? Then the troops he sent today into Nightwish would amount to little more than a finger of his prodigious hand.”
Manaelkin eyed him, suddenly realizing his fellow councilman's logic. But he was too proud to express it. “So what if this is a small number,” he said. “Today we have lopped off these, tomorrow the rest.”
“Again, I wonder,” said Alwynn. He paused and then asked, “Do you ever tire of your own ploys, Manaelkin?”
The council chief eyed him narrowly. “No, because I'm right.”
Alwynn looked back to the battle;
massacre
was more like it. “You manipulate your own mind to make sure you're always right,” he mumbled. “Until you have nothing left to manipulate.”
As the mass of dead continued to rise, Travin ordered entire units of flet soldiers to leave their posts and start casting corpses into the river where the current would carry them to a subterranean lake far away from the protected water supply of the Elves. There, razorfish and other sightless carnivores would feed for months to come.
The layadine cannons pumped out the white powder, filling the entire cavern with a thick film of the stuff. And with it, the invasion slowed. Flet soldiers farther back began to lift their voices as they noticed fewer and fewer Warspiders come through the hole. Soon Travin realized the entire city was caught up in euphoria as the unthinkable became reality: they had defeated the Spider King's attack.
When the echo of the last cannon blast died awayâand nothing stirred beyond in the catacombsâTravin gathered his troops and plunged up the bloodied steps, pursuing the retreating enemy army back to the surface. Travin hoped that the most recent scouting reports had been accurate, that there would be no ambush waiting above. But even if all the scouts had been captured or killed and the enemy waited above, Travin knew they had to take the battle to the end, had to make sure.
Travin and his forces chased the remaining Warspider right out of the catacombs and back into the gleaming light of the morning sun. Once above, there was no other attack, no ambush, no reinforcements.