Aerynth
Senior Member
"Then you can be glad that you're the exact opposite of that, my queen." 'My love' was what she had wanted to say, but that had to wait. Harlina and others didn't really talk, though not talking didn't mean that they didn't listen. And honestly? The way she spoke with Remin probably struck them as overly familiar even without her peppering her speech with terms of endearment. Nothing could possibly make her look at her wife with-- well, anything that wasn't a complete and total adoration. Pextian had been right; she really was embarrassingly devoted to Remin, and the real kicker was that she didn't even mind. With the right person, vulnerability could be downright magical.
"Wait and observe, yes," Cyreia nodded. "If anything goes awry, we'll have to react." Every plan, no matter how good, could fall apart; it just wasn't possible to predict how how your enemy would react with one hundred percent certainty. There were too many different factors to keep a track of, too many variables, and the slightest shift in the configuration could potentially change everything. No, if you wanted to win, you had to adapt quickly. Rigidity would only get your men killed.
One of the soldiers brought them binoculars - one for every member of their group - and Cyreia accepted the instrument gratefully. Watching the situation on the battlefield would be much easier if she had more than just her eyes to rely on. Not that there was anything to watch, really. The air was heavy with anticipation, with the promise of death, but the two armies just... waited. For what? Maybe for a sign? (Cyreia knew they they awaited their commands, but she liked to think it was more profound than that. That they were enjoying the fragile peace while it lasted. It didn't last for long, though; the commands eventually came, and the faceless masses masses started to move.)
It was... strange, watching everything from above. Strange and vaguely uncomfortable. How could she ever expect to look the survivors in the eye when she wasn't with them? When she had opted to hide like a coward as they bled and died for her? Cyreia shook her head; these thoughts, too, were counterproductive. Guilt wouldn't help anyone. What would help her men, though, was her focus, so focus she did. For a while, everything went smoothly. The soldiers' swords tasted the first blood and the cries of pain were soon drowned in the sounds of steel clashing with steel. Bodies were collapsing on the ground, too. How many of them? God, it was difficult to tell. Not that many considering that the battle had just started; compared with what would come, this was a mere appetizer. Before this whole mess ended, the soil would be drenched with blood. Not yet. Not yet. Not yet. And then-- then she finally saw the enemy rain fire upon her troops.
"Now," Cyreia told the magic user standing next to her, "give them the signal. Let them cast the illusion."
After that, everything happened way too fast. Their men fell, seemingly consumed by flames, and the enemy soldies jumped into the river of fire to slaughter the survivors. Then they were suddenly surrounded from both sides, surrounded and dying, dying, dying, dying by tens and hundreds. The plan worked. In fact, it worked a little too well. It only occurred to Cyreia that killing the enemies might not necessarily lead to the victory here when two figures clad in grey emerged on the battlefield out of nowhere and started... devouring the corpses? No, not just devouring. They absorbed them without a trace and grew as they did do; grew to the point their once human-shaped bodies turned into amorphous blobs, terrifying and grotesque. Soon, panic engulfed the whole battlefield. Soldiers threw away their weapons and ran, their affiliations forgotten, but that couldn't save them. The creatures were hungry, and they continued to feast.
"Wait and observe, yes," Cyreia nodded. "If anything goes awry, we'll have to react." Every plan, no matter how good, could fall apart; it just wasn't possible to predict how how your enemy would react with one hundred percent certainty. There were too many different factors to keep a track of, too many variables, and the slightest shift in the configuration could potentially change everything. No, if you wanted to win, you had to adapt quickly. Rigidity would only get your men killed.
One of the soldiers brought them binoculars - one for every member of their group - and Cyreia accepted the instrument gratefully. Watching the situation on the battlefield would be much easier if she had more than just her eyes to rely on. Not that there was anything to watch, really. The air was heavy with anticipation, with the promise of death, but the two armies just... waited. For what? Maybe for a sign? (Cyreia knew they they awaited their commands, but she liked to think it was more profound than that. That they were enjoying the fragile peace while it lasted. It didn't last for long, though; the commands eventually came, and the faceless masses masses started to move.)
It was... strange, watching everything from above. Strange and vaguely uncomfortable. How could she ever expect to look the survivors in the eye when she wasn't with them? When she had opted to hide like a coward as they bled and died for her? Cyreia shook her head; these thoughts, too, were counterproductive. Guilt wouldn't help anyone. What would help her men, though, was her focus, so focus she did. For a while, everything went smoothly. The soldiers' swords tasted the first blood and the cries of pain were soon drowned in the sounds of steel clashing with steel. Bodies were collapsing on the ground, too. How many of them? God, it was difficult to tell. Not that many considering that the battle had just started; compared with what would come, this was a mere appetizer. Before this whole mess ended, the soil would be drenched with blood. Not yet. Not yet. Not yet. And then-- then she finally saw the enemy rain fire upon her troops.
"Now," Cyreia told the magic user standing next to her, "give them the signal. Let them cast the illusion."
After that, everything happened way too fast. Their men fell, seemingly consumed by flames, and the enemy soldies jumped into the river of fire to slaughter the survivors. Then they were suddenly surrounded from both sides, surrounded and dying, dying, dying, dying by tens and hundreds. The plan worked. In fact, it worked a little too well. It only occurred to Cyreia that killing the enemies might not necessarily lead to the victory here when two figures clad in grey emerged on the battlefield out of nowhere and started... devouring the corpses? No, not just devouring. They absorbed them without a trace and grew as they did do; grew to the point their once human-shaped bodies turned into amorphous blobs, terrifying and grotesque. Soon, panic engulfed the whole battlefield. Soldiers threw away their weapons and ran, their affiliations forgotten, but that couldn't save them. The creatures were hungry, and they continued to feast.