You are in a road flanked by two fences dividing one farm from another. You use this to your advantage as you order the men with pitchforks to get down on their knees and hold the forks in front of them. You tell the ones with shorter weapons to hold back and wait for them to get into melee range. Finally, you tell the remaining men to fire at will at the charging horsemen. The horsemen were almost upon you. The riders continued to charge despite the wall of death you had set up. They were probably arrogant, thinking mere peasants could not stop them. The horses were either extremely courageous or extremely stupid, given the previous engagement, the later was more likely true. Regardless, the horsemen charged straight into the wall of pitchforks, and you were momentarily deafened by the crunch of bone and the screaming of the horses. Your pitchfork broke from the impact, but the horse dropped dead and the rider flew over you head, to be killed by Renard before he could recover. The rest of the horsemen were killed in a similar fashion, but now with nearly half of the pitchforks either broken or embedded in dead horses, the second wave of horsemen would be a lot more painful. Thankfully, by this time, your archers had begun firing, dripping soldiers off of their mounts, or crashing the horses themselves. You order the men without pitchforks to quickly take swords from the corpses and ready themselves behind the thinned wall-of-death. The second wave is slightly more successful, as some horsemen fit through the gaps and kill some of the pitchfork-carriers, but your group still kills more than they were killed. You now have so little pitchforks left that a wall is useless. You order the rest of the men to retreat behind the small pile of bodies so that the horses would be slower. You also hope that the surviving enemy horses will get in the way, since they were casually grazing in the middle of a warzone. Unfortunately, despite all that, you know that this charge will be devastating. However, before the horsemen get to you, a horn sounds out and they stop and retreat back to the army. scores of archers take the front row and aim their bows at your group now numbering just about 2 dozen. Renard quickly informs you, "Most of the women and children are in. We've done our job."