hurt like I had bits of sharp gravel trapped inside my joints, and next day I
mentioned this to those two wise Scythians, who looked at each other and nodded.
‘We can help you there,’ they said.
I was so impressed with the other stuff they’d given me that I’d have tried
anything they chose to recommend without a second thought. But I’ll say this for
them, they did try to warn me.
‘These leaves,’ they said, ‘are a great medicine among our people. When we’re
sad or unhappy, we throw a few handfuls of them onto the campfire, and a few
minutes later we’re all dancing and singing and laughing, as if we hadn’t got a
care in the world. It’s a bit like being very drunk,’ they went on, ‘except that
we’ve noticed before now that from time to time a man will get so happy because
of the smoke that he’ll trip over as he dances round the fire and fall into it,
and unless his friends pull him out he’ll just stay there, lying quite happily
burning to death. The magic smoke, you see, makes you feel no pain; and that’s
why we’re a bit wary of giving it to foreigners who aren’t used to it. You’d be
amazed,’ they went on, ‘how effective it is. A man can lose his wife and see his
children die before his eyes, and still he’ll feel no pain, just sit there
grinning and muttering happily to himself. So be careful with it, that’s all
we’re saying. A man who doesn’t feel any pain at all can be a real danger to
himself and other people.’
‘All right,’ I said. ‘Point taken. Just so long as it takes away the pain of the
bee-stings, it’ll do me just fine.’ So they gave me a big jar of these leaves,
and as soon as they’d gone I pitched a handful on the fire and waited to see
what would happen.
Brother, it was amazing. After a few minutes, all the pain in my joints was
gone; in fact, I didn’t seem to have a body at all. In fact it reminded me a lot
of Plato —(‘You read Plato?’ I asked.
Eudaemon frowned. ‘Yeah, well,’ he said. ‘A bloke I served with had a copy once.
Sometimes it gets so boring on campaign you’ll read any bloody thing. And it
made a welcome change from “Produce of Attica” on the necks of wine-jars.’)
—That bit in Plato where he talks about the perfect or ideal state of being,
where we’ve purged ourselves of the body and all its worldly concerns and we
exist as creatures of pure thought, which I guess is what you philosophers
reckon is a good time. A load of crap, obviously, when you stop and think about
it; but after I’d been breathing in that smoke for a bit, that’s just how I
felt, and in a strange way I could see the attraction. Anyway, it sorted out the
bee-stings, and an hour or so later the effects wore off and I gradually came
back to normal. Of course the stings started hurting again after that, but not
so much, because the other stuff was doing its job; at least I could get about,
and I could walk from my quarters to the mess hall without bursting into tears.
Now that I had a way of at least surviving, I knuckled down and started learning
about bees. And believe me, there’s a lot to learn. Luckily, I had those two
Scythians to teach me; I had a word with their commanding officer and got them
seconded to my command. They were happy enough; it got them out of serious
soldiering, and I upped their pay a bit, too; anything to keep them sweet and
take the load off me.
Anyway, they taught me how to make and repair beehives, either by sewing
together tree-bark or weaving osiers, and smearing clay in the cracks to keep
the little buggers nice and warm. You’ve got to be particular about what kind of
bark you use, mind; some kinds of tree don’t agree with them at all, like yew or
crab-apple. They taught me which kinds of leaves and plants you need to gather
and dump about the place to keep them sweet and make sure they keep coming back;
balsam, saffron and honeywort really draw them in, which only shows there’s no
accounting for tastes. Even more important, they taught me how to sort them out
when they get all stroppy and start swarming — all you do is, you scoop up a big
handful of dust and throw it over the swarm, and they calm down just like that.
Amazing, the first time you see it. And they showed me how you recognise the
queen by her size, and how you pull her wings off to stop her flying away and
leaving the hive; a dirty trick, if you ask me, but that’s war for you.
They made me this smock thing, with a big hat and a veil to go with it, and that
helped keep the bastards from stinging me to death; but I still got stung in
spite of all the fancy dress, whereas they never got stung at all. So I asked
them about it and they said, No, the bees left them alone because they
understood each other. After a while, they said, you learn how to communicate
with bees, on a very basic level, of course. It’s all to do with the way you
move, they said; if you’re relaxed and calm and don’t make sudden movements or
anything like that, they stop seeing you as a threat and quit stinging you. Of
course, I reckoned that was all a load of cock; but bugger me if it wasn’t true,
and gradually it became second nature to me. They stopped bothering me, took no
notice of me at all, even when I was up to my wrists in them. I promise you,
it’d make you swear off drink for life to watch me groping about inside a
seething mass of bees, with them crawling right up my arms and all over my face,
and never getting stung once.
So; thanks to extreme dedication and diligence on my part, I’d gone from being
more or less completely ignorant about bees to the point where I could probably
keep a household in honey and beeswax. Pretty impressive, don’t you think?
Except that that wasn’t the point. King Alexander didn’t want honey and beeswax;
he wanted a secret weapon that’d cut a swathe through the great walled cities of
Asia . On that score, my two Scythian friends weren’t any use to me. Nobody was.
Even if Aeneas the Tactician were still alive (he may be, for all I know, though
I hope for his sake that he isn’t, just in case he runs into me some dark night)
he wouldn’t have been able to help me, for the simple reason that neither he nor
anybody else had ever done anything of the sort before. If Alexander was to have
his secret weapon, I was the one who was going to have to figure out how to make
it work.
‘You’re mad,’ said Anacharsis, the elder and gabbier of the two Scythians, when
I broke the news to him. ‘It can’t be done.’
‘Oh,’ I said. ‘Why not?’
He rolled his eyes. They’re good at that, Scythians. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘for a
start, the King wants you to move the bees, yes?’
‘More than just move them,’ I replied. ‘Wherever the army goes, they go too.’
‘Out of the question,’ Anacharsis said. ‘If you load the hives onto a cart,
you’ll lose the bees. They’ll fly out, and when they return the hive won’t be
there any more. They won’t be able to find it.’
I thought for a moment. ‘All right,’ I said. ‘How’d it be if we sealed the hives
up with wax or mud while they’re in transit?’
He shook his head. ‘
They’ll die,’ he replied. ‘Either they’ll fight among
themselves and kill each other, or they’ll just curl up and go to sleep. Forget
it.’
I rubbed my cheeks with the palms of my hands. Helps me concentrate. ‘All
right,’ I said, ‘I take your point. But we’ve got to find a way round it,
somehow or other. Put that on one side for now; any other problems?’
He nodded. ‘Feeding them,’ he said. ‘If you let them out to gather pollen,
they’ll fly away. Now suppose you find some way of keeping them in the hive
without killing them; they’ll just starve to death instead.’
My head was beginning to hurt. ‘Honey,’ I said. ‘We buy up all the honey we can
lay our hands on and feed them on that. Money’s not a problem, remember.’
He sighed. ‘This is ridiculous,’ he said. ‘Bees are meant to make honey, not
consume it. The whole idea’s unnatural.’
‘Agreed,’ I said. ‘But we’re lumbered with it, so stop being so damned negative
and help me find a solution, unless you want to find yourself reassigned to a
suicide squad come the first battle.’
Then his mate Bobas, who usually never said a word from one new moon to the
next, lifted his head off his chest and looked at us both. ‘Siege towers,’ he
said.
We waited for him to enlarge on this oracular statement, but he didn’t oblige. I
shook my head. ‘How about—’ I’d started, when Anacharsis grabbed my arm.
‘He’s right,’ he said joyfully. ‘Do you know, that’s brilliant. Exactly what we
need.’
I scratched the back of my head. ‘Could one of you explain it to me?’ I said.
‘I’m lost.’
Anacharsis looked at me as if I were feeble-minded. ‘Siege towers,’ he repeated.
‘You know, the portable scaffoldings with wheels they use to attack walls and
towers.
‘I know what a siege tower is, thank you very—’ I broke off. I’d seen the light.
Just like the man said, it was brilliant.
Now you, dear brother, have spent your life skulking about in well-fortified
cities or following a plough, so I don’t imagine you’re all that familiar with
siege towers and how they’re made. Basically it’s a platform perched right up
high on a scaffolding tower, all resting on a wagon-bed with two pairs of small,
very solid wheels sticking out of the corners. The idea is, the top of the
platform’s level with the top of the battlements of the city you happen to be
picking a fight with at that particular moment. The assault party stands on the
platform and a whole bunch of other guys push this contraption tight up against
the wall.
Now then; obviously the thing’s got to be made on site since no two city walls
are the same height and if you’re too high or too low —well, forget it. But some
of the components are interchangeable, one-size-fits-all sort of thing; for
example, the big wicker shields they hang on the front and sides to keep the
enemy arrows off the assault party. Actually, they aren’t worth a light when you
come down to it, but there’s one very special thing about them I might not have
mentioned yet. They’re made of either hard bark or thick osiers woven together
with a very fine weave, which makes them strong enough without being too heavy.
In practice, they make the weave so fine that nothing gets past or through,
except an arrow at point-blank range. They’re certainly bee-proof. And they’re
big. Just what the doctor ordered. Cut ‘em up and build what’s effectively an
enormous hive, one with enough space for the little bastards to fly about inside
and keep from going nuts or dying of boredom. We made them the same length as
the bed of a great big long wagon, with a trapdoor in the side so we could get
in and out.
Simple idea. The bees stay in this hutch contrivance, which bounces along on a
wagon with the rest of the siege train. A couple of times a day, someone climbs
in to keep the feeders topped up with honey and change the leaves and foliage,
make sure they’re all right. And there you have it. Mobile beehives that’ll go
wherever you can take a long wagon and a dirty great long train of mules.
Simple, yes?
Simple idea, hideously complicated to build in real life. We ended up tying the
parts together with fine-filament rope, the way they make the hulls of ships in
Egypt . It worked, is all I can say. It stayed in one piece and it kept the bees
happy, or at least not as mad as they’d have been cooped up in a closed hive. We
loaded it onto a wagon bed and took it for a twelve-mile hike just to test it,
and it survived and so did we, and so did the bees.
‘Crazy,’ Anacharsis said, as we brought it back into the camp.
‘Maybe,’ I replied. ‘But it works.’
‘So far,’ he answered gloomily. ‘We’re going to look real idiots if these things
fall apart somewhere in the mountains of Ecbatana and all the bees fly away.’
‘True,’ I conceded. ‘But at least we’ll have lived that long. And besides,
remember what it is the King’s got in mind for us to do. Chances are we’ll all
have been cut into rashers by the Persians long before we get to Ecbatana , so
nobody’ll ever know.’
Does that sound unduly pessimistic to you, brother? Well, you’ve got the
wonderful advantage of hindsight. You know that in spite of the odds and some
truly shameful acts of bad soldiering, King Alexander pretty well strolled
through Asia , with the Persians either running away or impaling themselves on
our spear-points like moths buzzing burning lamp-wicks. Now that’s not how it
was either, but I don’t suppose I’ll ever convince you of that, because all you
know of the story is the outcome. You know we won, and we won easily, so as far
as you’re concerned there can’t have been anything to it.
But I tell you, brother, those weeks when we were getting ready to set off, the
only way we kept from going crazy with fear was by singlemindedly thinking
about something else. We knew that what we were about to try to do was utterly
impossible. We knew we were probably all going to be dead inside three months.
Believe me, if I’d thought I’d still be lugging around those idiotic bee-hutches
ten years later, I’d never have dreamed of trying something so dumb; I’d have
applied my mmd and thought of a better system. As it was, I didn’t care all that
much. The hutch idea was, as they say, good enough for government work, so
that’s what we did. And if ever I started worrying about it, I had those
excellent Scythian leaves to take the pain away. Wonderful medicine, that; cured
you of life, which at times is even more painful than bee-stings.
Now, according to King Alexander, dear brother, you’re the world’s greatest
living authority on military history, so obviously you don’t have to be told
about the Persian war by a mere eyewitness.You know it all already. In fact, you
ought to be telling me.
Actually, to be straight with you, I wouldn’t recommend that you put a lot of
faith in my testimony even if you weren’t a mighty historian. Truth to tell, I
was out of it a lot of the time, in more senses than one. While the King and the
r /> fighting army were off tanning the hides of the Persians, we were plodding along
with the siege train or standing about waiting while the engineers slowly and
painfully dismantled the wagons to get them through some narrow mountain pass or
other, then put them slowly and painfully back together again. We spent hours
like that, watching other people work, with the convoy of mules and wagons
stretched out behind us, nothing to do but listen to the soft chink of distant
hammers driving out axle pins. It was boring, and boredom is a very acute form
of pain, let me assure you. Fortunately, I had plenty of medicine; so it won’t
come as too much of a surprise when I tell you that I haven’t a clue about a lot
of the places we went to, what they looked like, whether the houses were
flat-roofed or thatched, whether they kept sheep or goats, the names of the
rivers and the location of the fords, where the snow-line was, how many days it
took to get from one particular poxy little village to another. You can read all
about it in one of the books, you don’t need me to tell you. So I won’t. Now I
could tell you some pretty damn fascinating stories about some of the things I
did see and some of the people I spoke to, often for hours at a time, but you
see, they weren’t real, and therefore of only incidental interest to a dedicated
historian like yourself. In a way, of course, I’m sorry I missed the show; but
that’s me all over. I was always the kid who was so excited at the prospect of
going to the theatre that he lay awake all through the night before and then
fell asleep immediately the play started.
Yes, brother, that’s soldiering for you; well, partly. Actually there’s more to
it than that. There’s also the long days in the murderous heat, when you’re
manhandling the baggage over trails where the wagons can’t go, in your
breastplate and helmet (because there’s a one-in-ten-thousand chance that there
might be renegade Hyrcanian infantry units hiding out in the hills, and you know
that the one time you don’t wear your armour is the time they’ll attack), with
the sweat trickling off your forehead into your eyes, no skin on your palms
because of hauling on dry papyrus cables with sweaty hands, your head pounding
from the cruel brightness of the sun — and then, just when you reckon you’re
Alexander at the Worlds End Tom Holt Page 54