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Alexander at the Worlds End Tom Holt

Page 55

by Alexander at the World's End (lit)


  about done, the load gets wedged fast between two rocks, or an axle pin shears

  or a mule refuses to budge or some fool gets his leg trapped under a fallen

  boulder or an A-frame pops its dowels or some other bloody thing goes wrong;

  nobody else is going to fix it but you, and you aren’t going anywhere till it

  gets fixed, so although you’re so weary you can’t stand straight, let alone

  think, you’ve got to force yourself back into problem-solving mode, find that

  last scrap of energy you were saving for taking your boots off, and deal with

  it, as quickly and efficiently as possible.

  Soldiering is about climbing for two days up the only pass through the tallest

  mountains you’ve ever seen in your life, only to find that you’ve reached a

  defile so narrow you can’t get the hutches through even if you turn them on

  their side, so you’ve either got to unship the pickaxes and widen the bugger,

  chip by bone-jarring chip, or trudge back down the way you came and go the extra

  seventy miles south that’ll take you round the mountains, even though it means

  losing contact with the rest of the column. Soldiering is about breaking open

  the five jars of flour that are going to have to last you the three days it’ll

  take to get down the mountain, only to find there’s been a cock-up somewhere in

  Supply, and your five jars of flour are in fact three jars of lamp-oil and two

  jars of shield-dubbin. Soldiering is getting to the top of the next lot of

  mountains and looking down to where there should be a big, wide river where the

  barges are waiting to carry you the next sixty miles; but not only are there no

  barges, there’s no damn river. Soldiering is furious arguments with some other

  poor bastard just like you over who was supposed to have checked with

  Intelligence that the barges were going to be there, and finding out that really

  it was your fault, and the whole miserable mess is your responsibility, nobody

  else’s. Soldiering is dysentery, unexplained fevers that you simply haven’t got

  time to indulge, wrenched muscles you ignore until you’re so used to the pain

  you don’t notice it any more; it’s men under your command having their hands

  torn off by badly secured loads shifting on the crane, or falling off narrow

  tracks down steep gullies and breaking their backs, and you have to leave them

  and keep going on, because if you stay and wait for them to die, the water or

  the barley for the mules is going to run out, and everybody’s going to be in

  trouble.

  Oddly enough, you historians tend to skip over most everything that makes

  soldiering what it is, in favour of battles and plans of campaign and a whole

  lot of other stuff that happens on the edges of soldiering — it’s as if you

  really believe that any one man, one general, is in control of the things that

  happen to an army as it blunders and lurches along from one wretched,

  inconvenient foul-up to the next, or that battles turn out the way they do

  because two great men in red cloaks sit down to play a game of draughts with the

  bodies and lives of a hundred thousand people. Obviously you don’t believe

  anything of the sort, because nobody that gullible ever learned to read, let

  alone write a book; and yet you put it down in the scroll, and people who’ve

  been soldiers and know what it was really like will listen to your book being

  read and nod their heads, maybe muttering to the man sitting next to them,

  ‘Actually, I was on that campaign; I’d forgotten all about that skirmish till he

  mentioned it just now.’ You know, you’re almost as bad as Homer and the poets

  for not mentioning the painfully obvious. I suppose it’s some sort of literary

  convention, like the way that throughout a hundred thousand verses of the Iliad,

  with all the fighting and speechmaking and roaring about the place in chariots,

  nobody ever needs to stop what they’re doing to go for a pee.

  Sorry, brother, am I boring you?

  That’s all right, then. I saw you yawn, and I thought you might be getting

  bored. Just in case you’re only being polite, I’ll tell you about something

  truly interesting, shall I?

  There’s a city called Tyre — you’ve heard of it? Oh, good. I’m not surprised;

  after all, it’s one of the biggest cities in the world, maybe the most important

  seaport and trading centre in Asia . This would be — what, two years after we

  left Greece ? Something like that. King Alexander had resolved to capture

  Phoenicia , to get hold of the Persian fleet and so secure his seaborne

  supply-lines, or some such thoroughly intelligent plan. Anyway, it was winter

  and in Syria , in winter, it rains. Believe me, it rains. I’ve seen wonders all

  right, on these travels of mine; staggering rock formations and vast rivers and

  amazing animals and people, but for someone like me, coming from Attica where it

  rains twice a year, just about enough to fill a small cup, that Syrian rain was

  the most amazing sight of all. Have you ever been soaked to the skin by rain,

  brother? Well, it’s an experience. It gets in your eyes and your mouth, it

  trickles down between your neck and the rim of your breastplate, it turns the

  dust to oily black mud that sticks to your boots and makes your feet so heavy

  it’s unbearable to lift them. Well, while we were struggling through all that,

  Alexander was picking a rather genteel fight with the city fathers of Tyre , in

  the hope of making a pretext that would allow him to attack the city with

  honour.

  Basically, Alexander wanted to find a way of not attacking Tyre . It was far too

  big and far too well defended to take by storm, and if we tried to lay siege to

  it we’d starve to death long before they did, with their ships unloading a

  thousand tons of grain a day into the town granaries. So he was trying to do

  what his father had done so well: scare them into giving up without a fight. All

  he really needed was a token of submission, nothing much; merely entering the

  city would do, at a pinch. So he wrote to the governing council to tell them he

  was proposing to visit the temple of Melkarth , of which he’d heard so much. The

  Tyrians wrote back saying that in fact the city temple wasn’t anything like it

  was cracked up to be; if he wanted to see a real cracker of a temple, he should

  do himself a favour and visit the one ten miles or so down the coast, where they

  had some absolutely stunning bas-reliefs. Alexander replied that he’d set his

  heart on seeing the city temple, and he’d take it as a personal favour if they’d

  just confirm that such a visit would be in order. He got no reply to that, and

  declared war at once.

  ‘It’s obvious what he’s up to,’ somebody said to me, as we huddled underneath

  the bed of a wagon for shelter from the rain. ‘ Tyre ’s the home base of the

  fleet the Persians would use if they were going to send help to anti-Macedonian

  rebels in Greece . Now then; Sparta ’s openly at war with the Macedonian

  presence in the Peloponnese , Athens is just waiting for someone to give the

  lead, and they’ll pile in too, and if Athens rebels, half of Greece will be up

  in arms, provided they can get money and supplies from Persia . From the Persian

 
view­point, opening a second front back home in Greece is about the only thing

  they can think of that’d get Alexander out of Asia . So; unless Alexander takes

  Tyre , he could lose this war in a matter of days.’

  It sounded eminently sensible under a cart in the middle of a flash rainstorm;

  Tyre ’s a problem, get rid of Tyre , problem solved. Unfortunately, the nearer

  to Tyre we got, the harder it became. For one thing, Tyre isn’t on the coast;

  it’s on an island, or at least the old town is, and that was the part we needed

  to capture. When I say island, I mean a proper island, not just some splinter of

  rock; butTyre old town covered every part of it, and the sprawl of the new town

  lay just across the straits on the mainland. Since the Tyrian navy controlled

  the sea, we couldn’t try an amphibious attack even if we’d wanted to (not that

  we’d ever want any such thing). All in all, the expression ‘hiding to nothing’

  took on a whole new dimension of complex and sinister undertones in this

  context. The only logical course of action was to pack our things, send a polite

  note to the King of Persia apologising for any inconvenience, and go home.

  I can’t remember, brother; when you were Alexander’s tutor, was logic part of

  the curriculum? If it was, you made a really poor job of it.

  He took one look at the island, decided the sea had to go, and ordered us to

  fill it in.

  It was such an awesome piece of arrogance and folly that nobody had the heart to

  object. That bit of sea’s in your way? Grab a spade and shovel dirt into it. So

  we did. To be precise, we set about building a causeway to link Tyre island with

  the mainland. To give you an idea of what was involved— ‘Eudaemon,’ I

  interrupted, ‘I’m sure this is going to be absolutely fascinating, but it’s been

  a long day and I’ve got to be up at the crack of dawn tomorrow. Do you think we

  might possibly.

  He gave me a look that would have turned milk into cheese instantly. ‘Fuck you,

  brother,’ he said. ‘We haven’t seen each other for twenty-five years, after

  tomorrow we’ll probably never see each other again, I’m explaining to you in

  detail exactly how you buggered up my life, and all you can think about is

  sneaking off to your pit. Well, the hell with you, brother. You can damn well

  sit there and listen, and if you so much as nod, I’ll take this jug and smash it

  over your thick skull. Understood?’

  I shrugged. ‘Since you put it like that,’ I said, ‘go on, please. Though I still

  don’t see why it’s my fault that Alexander ordered you to build a causeway

  across the straits of Tyre .’

  Eudaemon smiled sourly. ‘Ah,’ he said, ‘that’s because you will insist on

  talking rather than listening. Well, the less you interrupt, the sooner I’ll be

  done, so shut your face and pay attention.

  Where was I? Oh, yes. To give you an idea of what was involved, think back to

  that time when we were kids and that rich bastard — now what was his name? The

  old bloke with the young wife and that incredibly ugly thing on his nose, damned

  if I can remember — yes, that’s it, Philochorus — that rich bastard Philochorus

  was terracing that parcel of mountain land he’d inherited from his uncle. Well,

  think back to when he was going round borrowing every slave and day labourer he

  could find for the job of carting the rubble and spoil for the terraces up the

  mountain. It all had to be lugged up there in baskets, remem­ber, and so he was

  scrounging baskets too, every last hamper and backpack and pannier in Pallene;

  only there weren’t enough, so he had to go to the Market Square and buy every

  blessed scrap of wickerwork he could find; and as soon as word got around that

  Philochorus the Nose was desperate for baskets, the prices climbed so high they

  were having to crane their necks to look down on Olympus.

  And, dear gods, do you remember the performance when he actually got around to

  starting work? All the organisation; the relay teams and who was going to be

  foreman of which shift and who was going to report to who and the water-carriers

  and the muleteers suddenly coming over all snotty when they found out the masons

  were getting an obol a day more than they were and the masons talk­ing back to

  the foreman because they weren’t being given enough time to do the shoring-up

  before the earth-moving crews started pouring in the dirt. Wasn’t that the best

  show we’d ever seen in our lives? Well, picture that in your mind’s eye, and

  then try to imagine what it was like doing a similar sort of job, only with a

  hundred thousand workers instead of a hundred; then factor in the com­plications

  of the sea and the constant hail of missiles and arrows from the ramparts

  ofTyre, and maybe your imagination might just get a toe wedged in the door of

  what it was like.

  Not, of course, that I had any part in it. I was, as we say in the army,

  standing by; which means I was sitting on my bum where I’d been told to sit, all

  poised and ready just in case I might be needed at some undefined future stage

  in the proceedings. The first few days, of course, I really didn’t mind at all.

  Our family have always relished watching other people work, and the spectacle of

  all those poor fools in full armour humping enormous baskets of rubble on their

  backs while trying to dodge catapult bolts without falling into the sea was

  fairly engrossing, I can tell you. The amazing, the utterly astonishing thing

  about it was the rate of progress. You wouldn’t have believed it possible that

  ordinary men and women chucking one basketful of dirt at a time into the sea

  could have achieved so much in such a short space of time. There was something

  utterly inhuman about it all; it was like watching a tree grow. Maybe that’s

  what it’s like for the gods; when they’re feeling lazy after a good meal, do

  they lie on their stomachs in the sun watching forests sprout or rivers dig

  themselves valleys between the hills? No wonder the gods don’t seem to care too

  much about us. We must move so fast, they couldn’t even see us if they tried.

  After a few days, though, I was so twitchy and uptight I couldn’t keep still any

  longer. I broke the cardinal rule of military life, and volunteered. The staff

  bastard in charge shook his head and told me I wasn’t allowed to; I was

  specialist technical crew and I had to carry on standing by, whether I liked it

  or not. He added that if I volunteered again he’d have me suspended from duty on

  grounds of insanity, so I gave it up and went back to the tree-stump I’d been

  sitting on for the past three days.

  As it turned out, he’d done me a big favour, because by that point the Tyre

  garrison had stopped gathering on the walls to laugh them­selves silly at us,

  and were getting pretty damn nervous. So they decided to stop us; they stepped

  up the interference fire from the walls, they sent out war-galleys in continuous

  shifts to stand off a hundred yards on either side of the causeway and shoot up

  the work crews — which meant, in effect, that our people were under fire on

  three sides; they were dropping like olives off a tree, though that didn’t

  constitute a valid reason for
not working, and besides, they were only local

  civilians, so it didn’t matter. It was only much later, when the rate of

  progress had slowed by about a quarter, that Alexander realised he was going to

  have to divert some manpower from the job to deal with these bastards; but that

  was all right from my point of view, because finally I was allowed to do

  something.

  The idea was that we’d unship and assemble two of the mobile siege towers that

  we carried disassembled in kit form, and wheel them up to the top of the

  causeway to provide cover. Well, we set to with a vengeance, and there really

  was a lot to do.

  They were a fairly new addition to our stores, those towers; it was only when we

  reached Lebanon that we were able to find timber long and strong enough to build

  these particular designs. That meant, of course, that we’d never actually had to

  unship and assemble the damned things before; we hadn’t even worked out the

  drill in theory, let alone smoothed out the wrinkles in practice. I’m here to

  tell you, it was a hell of a job to have to do on the fly. Those things were

  enormous, they had to be in order to bear the weight of the full-size long-range

  catapults that Alexander wanted installed at the top of each tower. First we had

  to raise the uprights; of course, we found out at this point that half of the

  tenons didn’t quite fit the mortices, because the green timber had moved a bit

  since it was cut, so we had to plane and shave and chisel out on site, up to our

  ankles in dust and mud and shavings, while our people were being slaughtered by

  the dozen a few hundred yards away. Helps you concentrate, something like that.

  Anyway; we got the frames up, laid in the ties and braces, put in the flooring

  and the rails, finished up by stretching any number of green raw hides over the

  frames to stop the arrows and catapult shot, and handed them over to the teams

  who had the job of deploying the things. We’d done well, no doubt about it; and

  those things worked, too. They were tall enough that the guys inside them could

  get clear shots at the enemy on the wall and in the ships, and robust enough not

  to fall to bits no matter what got slung at them. We’d had the sense, you see,

 

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