“General!” cried Victolin.
“There is a disturbance in the fog.”
Linvin peered through the glass. The fog was indeed being stirred. With the ever-increasing light, he saw an
ocean of pikes pointed at the sky. They
moved slowly but deliberately toward Linvin’s line.
“How many would you estimate, Victolin?”
The cavalry leader too, had been watching through his
lens. Putting it down, Victolin
answered, “Six, maybe seven thousand at most.”
“Not the great host we would expect. Almost what we would be hoping for after two
major battles in two days.”
“Sir, we should ride round behind them now and attack from
the rear.
“Yes,” Linvin said calmly.
“That sounds like the correct move right now, but they are marching too
slowly. They must know they outnumber us
by a wide margin. Goblins rarely
maintain their composure when battle looms.
That is especially true when they expect to win. Yet the army we see marches at a snail’s
pace. I do not trust it.”
“They may be unsure of their footing in the fog,” Victolin
suggested.
“Perhaps,” answered Linvin, “but we will wait all the same.”
The pikes advanced on Linvin’s line. When they were five hundred paces away, their
heads came into view. At two hundred
paces, their enemy was totally uncloaked.
They wore hides fashioned into armor.
Their pikes were nearly three times the height of a man. Various secondary weapons were worn at their
sides.
Fardar stared at Linvin’s infantry with great intensity and
increasing distress. “Why do your
archers not fire? They are well within
firing range.”
“Patience, Lord Fardar,” Linvin replied calmly. “Their war chief is fishing right now, but I
am not biting.”
Soon the goblins were fifty paces away from the line. They lowered their pikes to point at Sculla’s
infantry and marched on in a loose phalanx formation.
Sculla himself was positioned in the middle of the front
rank. His men stood at attention,
awaiting their leader’s command.
“Javelins!” Sculla yelled. The
men each grasped one of their javelins and on command, hurled the weapon at
their enemy.
The salvo was accurate and lethal. Nearly the entire first line of goblins fell
in an instant. The next several rows
suffered heavy losses as well. Even so,
the army pressed on toward the Valian line.
At twenty paces, another round of javelins proved even more effective
than the first. Goblins fell, screaming
in pain. Without shields, they were easy
targets. Even with their horrible
losses, the goblins reached the line and attacked.
With the goblins’ front lines decimated, the initial contact
was only in a few places along the wall of shields, leaving large gaps in the
marsh dwellers’ ranks. Feverishly, the
goblins struck out again and again with their pikes, but their blows were
blunted by the disciplined formation.
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