Chapter 102: Against Orders (2)

Chapter 102: Against Orders (2)

Those with misgivings were sent back to their captain to tattle. Those that remained were fewer, but not significantly so. And not so few as Aaron would have guessed. They also understood the need to move now, without waiting for another round of conflicting orders to come down.

And so their group suddenly had enough militia with them to simply walk out the front doors, with fullif confusedpermission from those stationed there. The door guards had been sending persistent requests for aid since this had begun.

The towns burning, one of them said, to Lochlann. The enclavers have broken out of the longhouses; those that could. But theyve not come to ask the doors opened.

It was entirely unclear whether the doors would have been opened. Unclear even to those whod been standing here, watching through arrow slits as the town burned, waiting on the question.

The enclavers hadnt even bothered.

Fight with us, Lochlann said. It wasnt an order.

Yes, the guard said. And took his place with them, as Lochlann arranged his new men: who was to stay on the doors, who was to come out with him. Who was to guard the hall, so that when this was done, there would still be those with the loyalty to let them back in.

The lieutenant didnt order any enclavers to remain inside. The battlesmith didnt order her people to give up their crossbows for the militia to use. Leadership in parallel.

Then the doors were open, and there was gravel under their feet and tar-smoke thick as black night in their lungs. There was screeching from above and shouting from ahead and wood snapping and wings beating and the town was, indeed, burning.

Two of the longhouses had been hit with dragonfire. Not stray shots, because they were too far from the main fight here: deliberate destruction, and Aaron didnt know if it had been meant for distraction or simple cruelty, because he didnt know if the dragons whod done it understood what padlocks were.

The enclavers hadnt much needed his nudging to revolt.

There were at least three dragons on this side of the fort, or three that Aaron could make out through the darkness, whose scales couldnt keep up with mimicking the smoke around them. The nearest twisted and shrieked, battling to gain height against the griffins that swarmed it like ravens on a hawk. A ballista fired. And then the dragon and a griffin were both screaming, as a bolt impaled the white wings of one to the chest of the other, the both of them crashing to the ground as the rest of the flock scattered from the shot.

Other griffins had already torn their way into the burning longhouses, through roof or wall or door, joining efforts with those whod been fighting to tear their way out. Those theyd rescued were returning the favor, working to pass tables and shattered doors out of the wreckage, setting up barricades for the griffins to duck behind as the ballistae sighted their next targets. The griffins made for easier shooting than the dragons: they couldnt retreat. Not without leaving their humans undefended in all this. And if that was a thing theyd been willing to do, theyd have done it decades past when the enclaves were first formed.

A smaller one staredwings half-spread, chest feathers foofed forwardat a bolt that had gone half-way through a piece of wall and lodged just short of the beasties face. It backed away, chirruping high to itself, in the eloquent single-note cursing of any creature whod had too close a call.

Wings! Johns twin shouted, and the little griffin spun towards them. It wasnt a name; only an endearment, every bit as much as the griffins equally enthusiastic, Heart!Johns twin hugged his other half around its neck, and was wrapped in turn by sheltering wings.

Lochlann took in a breath. Let it out. Didnt choke on any smoke, which Aaron found admirable. Leave the griffins be, the lieutenant shouted. Theyre not here for the fort, and were not here for them.

And then he got his militia to work, helping finish with the evacuation of the longhouses and the setting up of barriers. Most importantly: he got his militia mixed in with the enclavers. The ballista fire above them came to a halt at their presence, even as several rather flustered griffins puffed out fur and feathers, posturing like cats as Lochlann more or less succeeded in getting his own people to work around them.

The kids whod come out with them were getting weapons passed out, to mothers and uncles and grandfathers, to all those uninjured enough to wield one. One old woman watched a demonstration on cranking her new crossbow. Then she walked over to the dragon heaving its ragged breaths against the ground, and put her first shot through its head. The bolt shattered its way through scale and skull, and the dragon finally relaxed into stillness. Its Death appeared above it, neck coiled back in what may have been affronted. It wasnt the same dragon Death that Aaron had seen circling with the rest; too small. This hadnt been an expected death. This hadnt been an expected fight, with how few of their kind were about.However the Deaths knew what they knew, it was failing them. Had been failing them since the day Aaron had left Markus behind on an alley floor.

Six, six, the bells around the fort repeated, like someones answer to this confusion.

The old woman hmmed over her killand reloaded. The other two dragons circled high; they were joined by a third from the other side of the fight, and the three circled far out of range of ballistae and easy mobbing, their scales flashing through colors Aaron couldnt begin to decode.

Other griffins and their humans took this opportunity to snap the shaft holding the pinned griffin to the dying dragon, and helped it back behind cover. Aaron watched long enough to make sure no one was fool enough to pull out the remaining wood out in the middle of a fight. When he heard a griffin shrieking for their healer, he turned back to business.

Right, he said, from his own safe sort of spot behind a singed table, the battlesmith near him. He turned to her. So Im supposed to ask for help. Ive got the seeds, if youve got people who know where to put them. And I would appreciate if that included a few in front of the fort, as well.

It would be dangerous to plant them on the cliffsides, in this. But it wouldnt be much help to those inside if this new barrier included everything but the fort.

Jedineja, she called, which was apparently her sons real name, as he was the one that turned to it. And it certainly wasnt a proper Onekin name. Help him. And remember that your brother prefers him breathing.

Johns twin had the nerve to tsk into his other halfs feathery neck. Aaron had the nerve to promptly and irrevocably forget the boys name.

In any case, his griffin was pulling away from him already, one gentle nudge of hooked beak against clutching fingers at a time. When that proved ineffective, the griffin simply shifted. And then he was rather too small for where those hands had been aiming, and ducking away before they could find a new grip.

Ive got to, the griffin said, in the voice of Johns twin, which wasnt quite Johns own voice, now that Aaron listened. These two spoke a bit lower; a bit closer to the edge of manhood, for whatever that was worth. The griffin twin had a large satchel slung over a shoulder. He skirted around one of Lochlanns men and ducked one of his own peoples wings, settling on the ground at the injured griffins side. He didnt have the heavy muscles of a blacksmiths apprentice. But he did have an apprentice healers deft hands, as he started bandaging the wing to secure in place the shaft that remained. There were downy feathers mixed in with his hair, and his eyes reflected the firelight in a way no humans could as he worked. They must have doppeled young for the changes to be so apparent. And only one of them had done much shifting since, with how very human Johns twin still appeared.

Another griffin shifted to human, and the woman Aaron had met in the forest stepped over to the battlesmiths side. Her sister, or her doppel, though one was certainly more likely than the other. She looked at their newly armed people, and quirked a brow with just as much wry amusement as her other half.

Well. Theres no going back now youve brought those out. She flashed a grin, with particularly sharp teeth. Good.

The smiths answering smile was a thinner, closed-lip thing.

Whats with the southerners? the griffin woman asked, her teeth pointed now towards Lochlann.

The lieutenant met her gaze with his very best blank face; then he turned away, all unhurried, and continued keeping his own nervous followers in line. Aaron liked to think hed prepared the man for ignoring her through long practice.

The battlesmith had little enough time for answer: the dragons above had gone black-scaled again, their conversation at an end. And then the first of the fireballs dropped.

It was almost a beautiful thing, before hed quite realized what it was: a shooting star, but too near and too fast

And then it struck the ground. Flaming tar broke and splattered, and neither clothes nor feathers were immune to burns. Dragons had never much valued enclavers for doppeling: they were already griffins in soul, if not body, and no dragon would want that allegiance crammed up into their own memories. The enclaves were a place for hunting, not for seeking doppels in. And so there was no particular need to either spare enclaver lives or minimize casualties as they would in any southern town.

Barricades set up for ballistae were hastily tilted to catch fire. In both meanings of the phrase. But it was a better thing to have the table above lighting up than to have flesh do the same, and Aaron joined the scramble to get under cover. He found himself pressed up against Johns twin and another griffin chick. The one from the forest; the one with lighter feathers and an accent too far off from human for his ears to fully hear. It bobbed its head to him. He nodded back, and tried not to crowd its wings too badly, as around them the tarballs fell.

They struck a few times more among humans and griffins and the barricades under which they huddled. Then the dragons got a sense of their aim, and their tarballs moved. Empty ground caught fire in splotchy craters. Then the forts roof, though it was made of stone and rather immune to true damage. One of the enclavers little gardens was less so, and saplings burned alongside the hopeful sprouts of herbs. And then the first hit the stables.

The stables, with all the southerners horses, which they would need to make it back south without exposing themselves to further attack for those extra days on foot. Some of Lochlanns militia made an aborted effort to reach the doors, but fireballs were still dropping and the burning tar scattered across the ground could burn straight through the sole of a persons shoe and up into the flesh. No griffin or enclaver even tried: horses were a thing that brought southerners to their lands faster, not any ally of theirs.

Its laughter was a soft whuff-chirping and a resettling of wings. It leaned in slowslow enough for him to move if he didnt like the ideaand headbutted his shoulder with a skull fully the size of a horses, and a bit broader.

My Heart likes you. What do you need? it repeated.

Aaron opened his palm on the last of the acorns. I need these on the cliffside. We have to fully ring the fort.

Without that ring of trees, the fort wouldnt be inside the forests protection. And the fight could just keep going as it was, until the dragons had killed those theyd come for.

Dangerous, the chick chirped, clearly picking words it knew he could hear. Hard.

Its fine, Aaron said. He could do it himself. Hed just have picked darker clothes, if hed known at the start of the day that hed be shimmying over cliffsides in an active battlefield tonight.

No fingers, the chick said, holding up a heavy paw by way of clarification. Its forepaws were those of an oversized leopard; it was the hind legs that ended in an owls talons. Though what it really said was Nowiggly sticks, which was a joke that meant the same. Because apparently they were joking.

It tilted its head, clearly thinking the problem over. Then it opened its beak, and kept it open until Aaron tentatively placed in an acorn, then a few more. It practiced a moment rolling them around with its tongue, bringing only one forward at a time. Then it nodded the silent nod of a child with its mouth full.

Good luck, Aaron whistled. But he really said Dont hit a tree, because he wasnt opposed to being on joking terms with what he strongly suspected was Johns other half. Or, perhaps, the griffin who was meant to be. It would have been very dangerous to send an actual griffin doppel into Onekin; a single downy feather growing in his hair would have gotten the Bakers boy skinned. But Heart and Wings could still belong to each other, even if they couldnt yet be each other. There was a whole kingdom tale about it.

The griffin chick fluffed up its feathers, gazing up at the fight overhead. Then it tipped forward, and glided soundless over the cliff. Aaron watched as it made its first stop, grasping the cliff face with its rear talons as it kept up flapping its wings for stability, running its beak over the rock in front of it until it seemingly found a crack deep enough to wedge in a seed. Then it kicked off and flew on, past where the curve of the cliff hid it from his view. Hopefully the ballistae operators wouldnt waste their shots on one chick poking its beak along the walls. Hopefully, it was a strange enough sight that they thought it Late Wakes tricks to begin with. It wasnt as if anyone else knew just how many griffin skins the Late Wake was down.

Aaron took himself over to wait by Lochlann. With the rest of the militia, and with everyone else as dark-haired as he was outside the forts walls. The militia themselves seemed to be realizing it now: that they werent the ones with the best weapons anymore, and this wasnt a space they could defend. They were drawing together into their own nervous little enclave, as the true enclavers and their griffins largely ignored them. Theyd still their injured to tend.

Lochlann was looking towards the fire, and the fort beyond. Its ballistae were silent as the dragons did the job of maiming each other for them.

Orin will pardon you for this, Aaron said. Probably.

The good lieutenants gaze didnt waver from the flames. My familys not one to ask pardons for things that needed doing.

Aaron thought about asking if the Iron Captain really had killed the Executioner King. But it didnt seem a thing in need of answer. Your grandmother would be proud, Aaron said. Probably.

Lochlann laughed. It got him some looks from both sides. but that wasnt a thing to beg pardon for either.

Johns twin returned with his child posse, their seeds all planted. So did the chick, panting hard but holding its head up proud. And then it was time to do a thing anyone could, but they were all waiting on Aaron for.

He stepped to up the forest, over by the roadside where there wasnt any fake border between him and its true trees. No need for the militia out here to know about that, no matter what side of this fight theyd chosen. A leshy was already waiting. It stood between the trees, attracted by all this fire so close to its home, or the digging so near its roots, or something else only it could know. Aaron still didnt know if there was more than the one of them. Or if it mattered, in any functional way.

He raised his hand, and touched wood.

The barred white of birch trees stepped from the darkness, jointed in a way that shouldnt be natural, ending cloven hooves where there should have been roots and white roots where those hooves should have been rimmed by fur, their tips seeking for soil with each step. The Spring Lord lowered its head to look at him, with one brown eye and one the cavern where glowmoss still grew, fringed by toothwort. He thought of asking for some, but it wasnt much good on burns.

Evening, Aaron said. The griffins have a gift for you, if youll thank them by defending it. Theyll need a bit of help in the growing, too.

The reindeer raised its head to look, its antlers breaking the canopy above. It sniffed the air, with its smells of wood smoke and ocean salt; lowered its head back down, and pawed at the dirt that marked its forests edge. Then it took a step back.

The leshy did not step forward. But there was a rippling in the newly disturbed dirt, starting at scuffs the Spring Lord had made and radiating towards the little pockmarks in the road where the acorns had been buried. The rippling dirt didnt mark a line between the seeds, but spread out from each, searching. Aaron took a step away. The bottom of his shoes stuck a moment before coming loose, fine white threads clinging to their undersides like the sort from which mushrooms grew. He took a few more steps back, and scraped his shoes for good measure. Thought of shucking them, but he didnt fancy standing barefoot on something that grew that fast into leather.

For a moment, it seemed like nothing more would happen. The enclavers and griffinsthose that had been brave enough to come witness, and Lochlann besideswaited, in their own quiet part of the night, while behind them ballistae thumped and dragons screamed and a fight they were no longer a part of did what fights do, loud enough to almost miss the pops. Such a little noise: the sounds of an acorn forced open from within, here and there and all over the road, and around the fort too. Not that they were close enough to hear those. But it became rather obvious, when the first little leaves began pushing their way through. Things moved rather fast after that, trees and people both. As shoots stretched to saplings, as brown-gray bark grew to cover green stems and branches split again and again and higher and higher, Lochlann shouted at his men. Got them running, right quick, to the empty fields where no trees had been planted, back where the injured were. The enclavers followed, with the griffins bursting into the air ahead of the trunks that surged towards them.

Aaron opted for simpler tactics: he stood still at the forests edgeat its former edgewhere nothing new was growing quite so fast. And he watched, as spring did as spring does: it grew, and it changed, and the world was a new thing when it was done. Leaves that had never seen sun stretched out white above him, until fort and fight and starlight where just a patchwork behind the forests own.

It matches you, he said, staring up at the new leaves, and the way the moon shone through like glowmoss where an eye should have been. The Spring Lord snorted, and took a step out to stand beside him.

The night was fairly quiet now, plus or minus a few far-away shouts. The fort should be ringed, now, snuggly locked under the new canopy, everyone inside safe so long as they werent stupid enough to poke at things obviously best left alone. The leshy had left their side, presumably to go enforce its new border on any such fools. He sincerely doubted that anyone he cared for would count towards that number.

The reindeer took another step, and still another, as if testing this new ground. And then it was across what had once been the road, and looking out of its trees and over the ocean.

Aaron still couldnt see either seals or Lady. But not so far off the shore, spouts of water glittered in the moonlight, from dark shapes too big to be anything but trouble.

Dont trust those, he advised.

The reindeer snorted again. And reached down, with a maw bigger than a significant portion of Aarons body, to gently nibble a lock of his hair. It had come loose from its tail somewhere between the light treason and the more serious sort, and it was hanging loose in front of his face and

and turning white

Aaron jumped away with a yelp, from a Spring Lord far too interested in matching.

We do not age our friends, Aaron scolded, to a creature that would only live this season. Not even their hair.

At least it was only the one clump. But it was a rather obvious thing, and not the sort he wanted to flaunt before any militia. Well. Any who hadnt been here tonight; he had little doubt the ones whod followed Lochlann were rather beyond questions, at this point.

He took his eyes off the whale spouts long enough to glance towards the town. The new growth was an easier thing to see through than the old forest; the trees more widely spaced, with no brush to speak of. One of the enclave children had planted a seed right at the town gates. They stood ajar, one of them torn off its hinges by the force of the trees growth, the other only gently pushed open. Someone elsepossibly a winged someone elsehad apparently tossed an acorn through one of the forts arrow slits. The tree had taken a fair chunk of the southern roof with it as it grew, which was just spiteful. And alarming, since hed been planning on the fort itself being safe enough from the forest for a time.

We would appreciate time to evacuate, Aaron said, one hand still sheltering his hair.

The Spring Lord grew its own patch of grass, which it proceeded to bed down on, its eyes turning back out over the ocean. Answer enough.