All's Fair -- Part VIIc -- Luther's Account of Mumsford
You and Luther spend a bit of time searching around for one of Marna's retainers to press into service as a guard at the library door, but it is extremely hard to spot specific individuals in amongst the huge crowds. Finally, you give up the search by rationalising that Gervaise will probably remain ensconced safe within the library at least until this evening, taking careful inventory of his new treasure hoard like a greed-filled dragon.
You set out to investigate the preacher's sermon by retracing your steps out of town through the eastern gate and back up the same road on which you arrived--when, near the parked convoy, you and Luther run across Higg Eatnell, a guardsman and the father of Henry and Hubert Higgs. Luther seems on the verge of assigning him some extra guard duty at the library, but Higg launches into such a worried ramble about his missing sons that Luther can only pat his back in sympathy and assure him that they're around here somewhere.
You continue onward. Not far into the quiet trek, you realise that this time alone with Luther is a perfect time to ask him about your father's last battle. In a small, uncertain voice that isn't quite sure yet whether it wants answers, you start up. "Luther, tell me about that day, near Mumsford, when Father got his fatal wounds. Were there this many people there? And the Sea Raiders, were they really so skinny and weak?"
"Aye, Milord. This many." With an appraising squint toward the busy fairgrounds, Luther projects his sight back, in more ways than one. "Aye. This many or more soldiers took the field that day. Each armed and armoured
cap-a-pie, horses stamping the ground at the bottom of that steep hill. The finest knights throughout all the March, both east and west, and some from the north, too, all took up their places in the King's centre battle. I was there, with your father, and insufferably proud to be there. We thought charging up and smashing the Baabar scum down the other side would be a simple thing. They raged and howled atop that hill like demons. We should have listened and thought better of our arrogance. They were even more numerous than us, nor were they outmatched in spirit and valour: starvation had only made them fiercer and more desperate, like hungry dogs."
Unknown to Luther, that particular comparison strikes uncomfortably home, and a cold shiver of fear runs down your spine.
"Maybe you see those weak Scrogs in the field now, Isaac. What you see now, what you hear now, all meant nothing up on the blood-slick slopes of Mumsford Mound. The bravest and the best on both sides fell."
After a long pause, Luther's lips continue moving, but a different man voices a hollow recitation. "We held out. We held out longer than any fifteen men had ever done before against so many. They came on in a reckless frenzy, whooping and shrieking, their massive chief driving them forward with swift judgment dealt out to the faint-hearted and to the slow-footed among them. We held, till Duke Erran took an arrow above his gorget. Denton... Our coordination collapsed all at once. The end was rushing toward us, so unbelievably fast. An axe stroke clove open the King's helmet, and it threw him down, twitching and shaking on the ground. The Great Chief himself came on fierce to finish off the King, and our strength and skill were useless to stop him. Your father fell over the King and took that brutal blow. Then I lay over your father and the King both, guarding them with my body, when Great Gergal towered over me and would have killed me with his hammer--but you won't ever glimpse that monstrous man gathering up mown straw in our fields, next to his lesser kind. Count Gorgan thrust his slender sword through a small rip in the monster's maille and gutted him. Then Gergal struck the Count's head in roaring revenge, so that a fine red mist sprayed out the seams of a crumpled helm. I passed out with the enemy still swarming around me.
"You'll hear many stories about that day, Milord, if you keep asking questions. Talk of hellfires bursting from the ground and of dark alchemy, of cowardice and of broken faith, of brother killing brother, or leaving brother behind; but nothing went as we thought it would, nor as any of us can quite remember now. I slipped into unconsciousness knowing the battle lost and my King dead, but Count Stone still alive. When I awoke, the battle was won, the King lived, and your father lay feverish with the gangrene.
"So go the tides in battle."