Otlina rode swiftly along the line of piled horse corpses, searching the bloody mass as the fighting started to die down around her. Presently she stopped and dismounted, climbing over several stiff hulks in order to get to her spear. Stooping low, she grabbed hold of the weapon and tugged hard, wrenching it out of it's victim with a sickening grinding noise and a gushing of frosty blood.
Her horse whinnied and Otlina looked up, her eyes catching a flicker of movement to her left. She spun in that direction, using the force of her momentum to pull the length of the spear through the frigid air. It's tip slashed gracefully across the face of her would-be attacker, severing the tendons in his jaw and stopping him dead in his tracks.
Following up the defensive maneuver with a quick downward thrust into the man's chest, Otlina's ear's pricked to the sound of more bodies moving, and she glanced about to see several other enemy soldiers leaping out of the dead around her. An ambush.
Thinking quickly, Otlina reached for her shield, lowering it just in time to reject an incoming arrow. Whirling about, she swung the spear one-handed and parried a sword, kicking the man in the leg during her first pass and then bashing him with the shield as she swiveled yet again, ducking under a club and driving the butt end of the spear into the assailants gut. Rising, she took a precious second and a half to steady her hand and hurl her spear. It sunk into the bowman's stomach several yards away as she whirled around one more time, leaping backwards to avoid a blow as she drew her sword.
A blade appeared in the neck of the enemy before her, and then disappeared. He fell with a panicked gurgling noise, and behind him stood Jutani, grinning like a gremlin. "Need rescuing, fair maiden?"
"Not hardly. Behind you."
Jutani spun around and readied his blades as another enemy charged them, this one wielding a magnificent silver flail. The strangeness of the weapon registered briefly in Jutani's mind, but was swiftly forgotten as he raised one sword to catch the blow, angling to his right to avoid the spiked ball as he plunged his other sword into the man's ribcage.
~~
The significance of the silver flail may have been lost on the two younglings during the heat of battle, but it was not lost on Io. From the moment the man had risen up from the bodies to spring his trap, her eyes had been locked on him, and his weapon.
Now she rode up to the pair as they finished off the last of their adversaries. Halting her advance and dismounting, she nodded to each of them as she passed, then solemnly stooped and picked up the silver flail from the bloody ground where it lay. It's chain was bent, it's spikes dulled and broken, it's handle smeared with mud and carnage, yet it was unmistakable.
"Krin."
With a hint of sadness in her eyes, Io gazed at the battlefield around them, searching the bodies briefly just in case. She knew there was no way of finding where Krin now lay; the carnage was too thick and the blood too dense. His flail could have been carried from the other end of the fighting and back for all she knew.
A laden sigh escaped her lips as she turned and walked back to her horse, carrying the silver flail with her.
~~
The battle was winding to a close. A few enemies still ran about, though now they were simply being routed and chased down by the soldiers. A small knot still held out near what was left of the archers, but they were swiftly being eradicated. Rinus was finally free to look about himself without a shield blocking half his view.
His horse breathed deeply and slowly as it trudged through the blood and snow. It's body was covered in cuts and gashes, blood and sweat not all it's own caked against it's sides. Foam pooled around it's mouth and dripped from it's open lips, it's head hung low and it's mane lain flat against it's shivering neck. Rinus did't look much better; countless scraped and gashes covered his armor, blood dripped from his left leg, and various fluids, bodily and otherwise, covered his person. Dried blood was prevalent, caking his armor and clinging to the stubble on his chin. A large gash cut across the front of his helmet, and the crest on top now ended short.
Still, Rinus was alive, and while he was alive he was still the captain of the unit, and intended on acting so. Stopping his horse in front of Yan and Aryana, he cleared his throat very loudly and shot the pair a
very disapproving look, the kind that guaranteed they'd be hearing about this later. At length.
"I presume your little ceremony is nearly finished?" he barked, breaking up their reverie. Just then Io appeared next to him and silently handed him Krin's flail.
The captain's mind was instantly brought away from the minor problem he saw before him, as he took the silver flail and held it for a moment. He cast his eyes about the battlefield much as Io had, and then sighed much as she had, handing the weapon back to her. It was not Krin's death that saddened him as much as the fact that they would never find the man's body, nor know how he died. There was no doubt that he ended valiantly; and that he would be satisfied with the manner in which he passed; yet his final moments, the final impact he left on the world, would be forever unknown. Every solider eventually accepted that this kind of death may be inevitable, but that didn't mean it was an easy thing to accept.
"Let's get moving." Rinus said quietly, turning his horse around and trotting off towards the northwestern edge of the battlefield.
~~
Buyir lifted Seiben from the snow and cursed as he saw the arrow jutting out of the man's side. The injury was bad, and Seiben was already going into shock. Blood was pouring out of the wound and soaking the snow and mud beneath.
With a heavy grunt Buyir lifted the man up and started carrying him towards his horse. Seiben was not a large man, but he wore plate armor, and so was not the easiest of burdens. Whistling loudly, Buyir got his horse to trot up to them, and then deposited his wounded comrade on the creature's saddle.
"Alright, steady there..." he muttered to the barely coherent Seiben, adjusting the man so that he leaned on the horse's neck. Satisfied that the man would not fall off, he planted one foot in the stirrup and was about to mount up himself, when he suddenly paused, his eyes darting to the north. The strange feeling of being watched had come over him again. Not so strong this time, but definitely there. For several seconds he scanned the trees and rocks and snow, but saw nothing.
"Damned blizzard..." he muttered, climbing on to his horse behind the wounded Seiben. Buyir gave the northern woods one last warning glance, and hen turned and trotted off towards the others.