be in your debt.” But I was thanking him for more than his troops. He was in this as knee-deep as Kaden and I were now. It was all or nothing.
A renewed exuberance erupted in the room, the generals and officers adding their thanks to mine, but Kaden, Rafe, and I exchanged a knowing look. If all the troops Rafe requested came, our combined forces would number seventy thousand. We were still outnumbered almost two to one by an army that would descend upon us with more deadly weapons. Rafe tempered their response with a reminder that this was only a bandage on a gaping wound. What we needed was a needle and thread to stitch it shut.
“But it’s a damn good bandage,” the Field Marshal said.
Discussions resumed. With the added forces in mind, the generals began talking of more defensive blockades on key Morrighan arteries.
A needle and thread.
I stared at Kaden. His mouth was moving, but I couldn’t hear the words. The room grew hazy. The deliberations became a distant rumble, even as other sounds rose to the forefront.
A creak.
A crunch.
A wheel on stone.
I remembered hearing the clang of the bridge. It came too soon. Before first thaw. The sounds in my head grew louder, the room dimmer.
The hiss of steam.
A keening howl.
Hurried footsteps.
Fright, thick as night.
Fervor, Jezelia, fervor, a hot whisper in my ear.
And then another voice, soft and quiet, as thin as a flutter of wind.
There.
“Lia?” Kaden said, touching my arm.
I jumped, the haze vanishing. Everyone stared at me, but all I could think was, pachegos. My chair squealed back behind me, and I raced to the side table where the piles of maps lay. “Move the food!” I yelled as I carried the armful of maps to the table and spread them out.
“What the devil?”
“Did you see something?”
“Someone tell me what she’s doing.”
I shuffled through the maps until I found the one I wanted.
There.
“A northern route,” I said. “This is the way he’s coming.”
A wave of arguments rose. “We already discounted a northern route. He could get caught in a late snowfall.”
“Farther north,” I said. “By way of Infernaterr. It’s the perfect route. It’s flat, and winter never reaches there.”
By now both Kaden and Rafe were looking over my shoulder at the map too.
Kaden stepped back and shook his head. “No, Lia. Not there. He would never come that way. You know the clans. Even Griz and Finch. Too many in his army fear the superstitions of the wastelands.”
I leveled my gaze at Kaden. “That’s the point. He is using that fear.”
He looked at me, still not understanding.
“Fervor, Kaden. He no longer has me. He’ll create his own. A different kind of fervor to push them forward.”
The dawning rolled through his eyes—and then the worry. How much sooner would they reach here than we thought?
“I’ve heard them,” I said. “The cries of the young soldiers. The howls of the pachegos. The Komizar uses their fear to rally them. And what better way than the wastelands of Infernaterr to move his army swiftly across the continent?”
I looked back at the map, eyeing an expanse between Infernaterr and Morrighan. More words sounded in my head. Rafe’s words, chiding me as my sword blocked his.
Attack! Don’t wait for me to wear you down!
“What is this?” I asked, pointing to what looked like a V-shaped line of peaks at the end of Infernaterr.
Captain Reunaud stepped closer to see what I pointed at. “Sentinel Valley. Sometimes it’s called Last Valley.” He explained it was believed to be the last valley Morrighan led the Remnant through before they reached their new beginning. He had traveled through it a few times in convoys headed to Candora.
Keep on the move! Let surprise be your ally!
“Why is it called Sentinel Valley?” I asked.
“Ruins,” he answered. “They sit atop the high hills that hem in the valley as if they’re watching you. Light can play tricks there. It’s an eerie trail, and when the wind whistles through the ruins, soldiers say it is the Ancients calling to one another.”
I asked him specifics about the terrain, the height of the peaks, the length of the valley, and the multiple canyons that lay beyond the peaks.
Advance! The sword is a killing weapon, not a defensive one. If you’re using it to defend, you’re missing a chance to kill.
Reunaud said it was ten miles of valley that narrowed to a point less than fifty yards wide. I already envisioned the Komizar’s front lines. They would be the youngest whom