58
I waited for an entire day inside that altar. The footsteps of the tatars, and their gargling voices could be heard outside for half a day, before everything got silent again. I waited another day, refusing to leave the hiding spot, even if my entire body was aching worse than any battle wounds could have made it do. I cursed the undisciplined archers who had put me in this situation, and caused the death of our entire garrison, for in return killing little more than 3000 men out of Attila's hundred thousand. Not until three days had passed since the battle, did I move out of my hiding spot. I could barely walk on my stiff legs, but the wound in my side miraculously felt better - it wasn't going to kill me, as I had thought. When I got outside I could barely keep the tears back - almost the entire city was burnt to the ground, little else than the house I had been hiding in was left. There were bodies everywhere, eyes picked out by carrion birds, clothes soaked with blood stains, and faces burnt beyond recognition. The horizon was crimson from the setting sun, but the sky above was colored in black and grey, covered by the silhouettes of schreeching crows and vultures. Apart from their noise, and the sounds of a few still glowing pieces of wood, the place was silent, eerie. I had never seen a battlefield like this before. What I had once thought was a matter of honor, now seemed absurd, disgusting. As I went for the gates the silence was broken. One of the bodies was talking to me. I turned around quickly and reached for my axe. It wasn't a corpse, but the body was so badly damaged and oddly shaped that I didn't understand how it could be alive. But yet, it spoke. I leaned forward to hear what it said.
Bookmarks