"There hardly seems a counterattack against these dastardly things," Broadstone commented. They were still so far out of range of the archers, that any sort of retaliation seemed more than unlikely. The defenders were forced to stand there and wait, enduring the assault, just a Broadstone and Blackwell had once endured the assault from the gathered army of the Verna horde, waiting for the opportunity in which they might counter attack.
"They do not seem quite as bestirred as they ought to be," Blackwell said, stroking his chin, and narrowing his eyes. He had supposed that the archers would be set to a degree more panic than they were. For even the most lowly of infantrymen could not surely see through the lacking of their position, and the slimming likelihood of their victory.