Hope Rearmed

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Hope Rearmed Page 23

by David Drake


  “Messer, shut up,” he said quietly.

  De Roors froze. He was plump, middle-aged and soft-looking and expensively dressed, a five-hundred-FedCred stickpin in his lace cravat. Raj didn’t think the man was consciously afraid of death, not after coming in under a flag of truce and guarantee of safe-conduct. He knew the impact his own personality had, however, and that it was magnified in the center of so much obvious power. Yet de Roors was still bargaining hard. There were more types of courage than those required to face physical danger, and they were rather less common.

  “Contrary to what you may have heard, Messer, not everyone in the Gubernio Civil is in love with rhetoric. I’ll put it very simply: Lion City must open its gates and cooperate fully with the army of the Civil Government. If you do, I’ll not only guarantee the lives and property of the civilian residents; Lion City will be freed from external tax levies for five years—and you’ll get a fifty-percent reduction in harbor dues and charges at East Residence.”

  He leaned forward slightly. “If you don’t . . . they call me the Sword of the Spirit, messer alcalle, but I’m not the Spirit Itself. If my troops have to fight their way in, they’re going to get out of hand—soldiers always do, in a town taken by storm.” De Roors blanched; a sack was any townsman’s worst nightmare. “Furthermore, in that case I’ll have to confiscate heavily for the customary donative to the men. Those aren’t threats, they’re analysis.

  “Messer, I want Lion City to surrender peacefully, because I’d prefer to have a functioning port under my control in the Crown. I will have the city, one way or another.”

  De Roors mopped his face. There was a moment’s silence outside as a gong tolled, and then the chanting of the morning Star Service. Raj touched his amulet but waited impassively.

  “Heneralissimo supremo, I can’t make such a decision on my own initiative.” At Raj’s blank lack of expression he stiffened slightly. “This isn’t the east, Excellency, and I’m not an autocrat—and the General of the Brigade couldn’t make a decision like that by himself.

  “And there’s the garrison to consider. Usually we have a few hundred regular troops here, enough to, ah—”

  Raj nodded. Keep the city from getting ideas. Free merchant towns were common on some of the islands of the Midworld. A garrison reminded the impetuous that Lion City was on the mainland and accessible to the General’s armies.

  “After the news of Stern Isle came through, the General sent three regiments from Old Residence, more than thirty-five hundred men of his standing troops under High Colonel Piter Strezman. A famous commander with veteran troops. They won’t surrender.”

  “Quite a few Brigaderos around here have,” Raj pointed out.

  “They weren’t behind strong walls with a year’s supplies, your Excellency,” de Roors said. “Furthermore, their families weren’t in Old Residence standing hostage for them.”

  What a splendid way to build fighting morale, Raj thought. I’ll bet it was Forker came up with that idea; he’s had too much contact with us and went straight from barbarism to decadence without passing through civilization.

  “As you say, this isn’t the east,” he said dryly. De Roors flushed, and Raj continued. “Let’s put it this way: you open the gates, and we’ll take care of the garrison.”

  De Roors coughed into his handkerchief. Raj raised a finger; one of the HQ servants slid in, deposited a carafe of water, and departed with the same smooth silence.

  “That might be possible, yes,” de Roors said. He drank and wiped his mouth again. “The problem with that, Excellency, is, ummm, you understand that we’re not encouraged to meddle in military matters, and—might I suggest that Lion City is of no real importance in itself? If you were to pass on, and either defeat the main Brigade armies, or take Old Residence, we’d be delighted to cooperate with you in a most positive way, most positive, you’d have no cause to complain of our loyalty then. Until then, well, it really would be imprudent of us to—”

  Raj grinned. De Roors flinched slightly and averted his eyes.

  “You mean,” Raj said, his words hard and cold as the forged iron of a cannon’s barrel, “that if you open the gates and we lose the war later, the Brigade will slaughter you down to the babes in arms. Quite true. Look at me, Messer.”

  Reluctantly, de Roors’s eyes dragged around again. Raj went on:

  “I and my men can’t hedge our bets, messer alcalle; neither can the Brigaderos, and neither of us will let you hedge, either, and thereby encourage every village with a wall to try and sit this war out in safety. If you try to straddle this fence you’ll end up impaled on it. No doubt that strikes you as extremely unfair, and no doubt it is; it’s also the way this Fallen world is and will continue to be until Holy Federation is restored. Which, as Sword of the Spirit, it is my duty to accomplish.”

  “I’ll certainly, ah, certainly present your views to my colleagues, Excellency—” de Roors’s fear was breaking close to the surface now, not least from the realization that what might be a religious platitude in another man was deadly serious intent in this.

  “Oh, you’ll do better than that,” Raj said.

  “The man is mad!” de Roors said, as his party rode back towards the city gates. Considerably more slowly, as there was no escort to part the traffic ahead of them this time.

  “What will you do, Master?” his chief steward said. The iron collar had come off his neck many years ago, but some habits remained.

  “Prepare to hold a town meeting,” de Roors snarled. “Precisely as the Heneralissimo supremo demanded.”

  “Barholm’s nephew . . .” the steward shook his head and leaned closer, putting the dogs close enough to sniff playfully at each other’s ears. “What a hostage!”

  De Roors cuffed the man alongside the head with the handle of his dogwhip. “Shut up. If we touched one hair on the Clerett’s head after giving safe-conduct to address the meeting, Whitehall would sow the smoking ruins with salt.”

  He paused, thoughtful; the other man rubbed the side of his head where the tough flexible bone had raised a welt.

  “And High Colonel Strezman would nail us up on crosses to look at it; you know how some of these Brigade nobles are about oaths, and he’s worse than most.”

  “If you say so, Master.”

  “No, our only hope is that he’ll march on rather than waste time with us . . . if we could open the gates he’d keep his . . . no, too risky—and the others would never go along with it, they haven’t met him and they don’t, they don’t—” de Roors shook his head. “He really believes it, he thinks he’s the Sword of the Spirit.”

  The chief steward looked at his patron with concern, the blow forgotten. His fortunes were too closely linked to the merchant’s in any case; they had been so for many years. He had never seen him so shaken in all that time. De Roors’s hands were trembling where they fumbled with whip and reins.

  “Maybe,” he said, trying humor, “he really is, Master. The Sword of the Spirit, that is.”

  De Roors looked at him silently. After a while, the steward began to shake as well.

  “He’s cheating me again!” Cabot Clerett broke out. “First he makes a great noise about rounding up and slaughtering some refugees in a hole, while I was fighting real Brigade soldiers. Now this!”

  I wonder if it’s hereditary? Suzette thought. Barholm Clerett never forgot a slight either, real or imagined. Men who’d wronged him when he was in his teens had discovered that with painful finality when he was enchaired as Governor thirty years later.

  “Your uncle might well feel he’s endangering you needlessly,” she said in cautious agreement.

  “Oh, it’s not that!” Clerett said. He smiled. “I’m glad you care for my safety, of course, Suzette. But I can’t be too cautious, or . . . It’s this mission. He’s going along to spoil any chance I have of a real success.”

  Suzette sank down beside him on the bench and took his hand. “Oh, Clerett,” she said. “I thought he was going in
cognito?”

  He took the hand in both of his. “Sometimes you seem so wise, Suzette, and sometimes so innocent, like a girl. Of course it’ll come out that he went along. And since he’s not covered by name in the safe-conduct, it’ll look as if he were doing the real, the risky work. He’ll be the hero, and I’ll be the flunky with the walk-on part.”

  The young man brooded for a moment. “And that—that fellow Staenbridge.”

  “Cabot, you will have to learn to work with all sorts of men when you’re Governor.” She smiled and patted his cheek. “And women, but you’ll find that much easier, I’m sure.”

  He flushed, grinned, and raised the hand to his lips. “Thank you. And,” he went on, “you’re right about working with all types. Although,” he said thoughtfully, “the first thing I’ll do is kill Tzetzas, if Uncle doesn’t do it first. With all he’s stolen, it’ll fill the fisc nicely.”

  Suzette nodded. “You’ll make a great Governor, Cabot,” she said, her voice warm. Paranoid ruthlessness is an asset in that job, most of the time.

  Cabot half-rose from the bench, and dropped to one knee. “Oh, Suzette,” he said, his voice suddenly stumbling over itself. “You’re the only one who really understands. Could I—could I have something of yours, to carry into battle? A pledge . . .”

  A few of the oldest stories, old even before the Fall, told of such things. Suzette reached into a pocket of her campaign overalls and drew out a handkerchief. Cabot Clerett received it as if it were a holy relic, a circuit board or rolldown screen, then tucked it into an inner pocket of his uniform jacket.

  “Thank you,” he breathed.

  I wonder, she thought, as he left, if he minds that it’s used?

  Probably not. In fact, that might make it seem more valuable. She shook her head. They let that boy read too much old poetry, she thought. Being so close to the Chair could restrict a child’s social contacts. Far too much.

  The final kilometer or so of the main road into Lion City was paved. The original surface had been stone blocks of uniform size set in mortar from the time the Civil Government ruled this area; that had been long before the development of coal mining made concrete cheap enough to use for surfacing. When one side wore too much under the continual pounding of hooves and paws and wheels, the blocks could be turned over, leveled on a bed of gravel and remortared into place. That had happened often enough for the remaining to be lumpy from having been turned several times. Holes in the paving had been patched, with flagstones and spots of brick and gravel set in cement.

  The paws of the detachment’s mounts made a thud-scuff sound on the hard, slightly uneven surface. Light from the setting sun cast their shadows behind them, and a blackness from the walls and gates loomed ahead. The arch of the gate glowed yellow with the coal-oil lanterns hung within the arch; that light glinted off edged metal within.

  “This is extremely foolish of you, Whitehall,” Gerrin Staenbridge said.

  They were both riding behind the color party, dressed in ordinary troopers’ uniforms with the 1st Lifeguards’ Vihtoria O Muwerti and leaping sicklefoot on the shoulder flashes, and Senior Sergeant chevrons on the sleeves. Suzette’s retainer Abdullah had given them a few tricks, a gauze bandage liberally sprinkled with chicken blood for the side of Raj’s face, and two rubber pads to alter the shape of Gerrin’s. Mostly they relied on the fact that few outside their own force had ever seen them closely, and more important, that few men of importance looked at common soldiers. They could both give a fairly convincing imitation of a pair of long-service Descotter NCOs. Which was, Raj reflected, probably what they’d both have been, if they’d been born yeoman-tenants instead of to the squirerarchy.

  Raj clicked his tongue. “I need to know exactly what we’re up against, and if we can find a deal acceptable to the citizens, or most of them.”

  From de Roors’s description, Lion City was accustomed to a fair degree of autonomy in internal affairs. The ways they had of settling policy sounded odd—more like a prescription for standing in circles shouting and waving their arms and hitting each other—but that was the way most large towns were managed, here in the west.

  “We need the active support of the townsmen,” he went on, “if we’re going to get anything done with inadequate forces. Now, you coming along is stupid. You’re my right-hand man.”

  “Exactly.” Gerrin’s grin was white in the shadows. “Look, you’re the one who’d invade Hell and fight the demons of the Starless Dark if Barholm said he needed the ice for his drinks. Damned if I am going to be left holding the ball if they shorten you, Whitehall. I know my limitations; we all should. I’m a better than competent commander, but I do best as a number two—when you found me, I was so bored I’d nothing better to do than diddle the battalion accounts, for the Spirit’s sake. You might have some chance of pulling this campaign off; I wouldn’t, and worse still, I might be expected to try. Jorg or Kaltin could hold the Crown easily enough, with the Expeditionary Force—and nobody would expect them to do more.”

  Raj nodded tightly. The real problem was that Barholm might send someone like Klostermann out to take over if he died . . . but he certainly couldn’t win by playing safe, in any event. They fell silent as the embassy approached the gate.

  There was an exchange of courtesies at the entrance; then General’s Dragoons fell in around the Civil Government party. Raj looked them over, a perfectly natural thing for his persona to do. They were well-mounted and well-equipped, with sword, two revolvers and a percussion rifle-musket in a boot on the left side of the saddle; they all wore similar lobster-tail helmets and gray-and-black uniforms. The officers wore breastplates as well, and the unit had maneuvered neatly to shake itself out beside his party. Altogether better-ordered than the Squadrones had been, and just as tough; the Squadrones had been down from the Base Area only a century and a half, but they’d spent most of that sitting on their plundered estates watching the serfs work with no strong enemies near them. The Brigade had an open frontier to the north, exposed to the interior of the continent. These men all looked as if they’d seen the titanosauroid more than once.

  If their leadership were as good as their troops, we’d be fucked, Raj thought.

  correct, Center acknowledged, enemy weakness in that regard was one factor among many in my decision to activate my plan in your time, raj whitehall.

  The main gate of Lion City was a massive affair, four interlinked towers in pairs on either side of the passageway with a squarish platform twenty feet thick joining them at third-story level. The main defenses were old-style curtain walls with round towers, running straight into the ground. Up until a couple of centuries ago cannon had been too feeble to threaten a stout stone wall, so defenses went high, to deter attempts at storming. Since heavy battering guns came into use the preferred solution was to dig a broad deep moat and sink the walls on the other side until they were barely above the outer lip. That way little of the wall was exposed to artillery, it could be backed with heavy earthworks and so support massive guns of its own, and a storming force still had to climb out of the moat and up the protected wall. Someone had done some work on the gate, though: the tower bases were sloped backward at a sharp angle to shed solid shot.

  The gateway looked like a compromise, avoiding the horrendous expense of modernizing the whole city wall, which was still perfectly adequate against pirates or raiding savages. Raj looked up with professional interest as they passed in; first heavy timber gates strapped with iron and over half a meter thick, then a portcullis of welded iron bars thick as a man’s arm. The arched ceiling overhead held murder-holes—gaps for shooting and dropping unpleasant things on anyone coming through—and there was a dog-leg in the middle of the passageway to further hinder invaders.

  Eyeballs glittered in the torchlight as the embassy came through at a walk; the gaslights common in the east were unknown here, but there were enough burning pine-knots to compensate tonight. Somebody had been busy, and piles of flimsy lath marked where the
reserved area within the walls had been swept clear of sheds and shacks. The citizens crowded it, waiting to see their fates decided; there were more all along the road to the central plaza, which was not far from the gate. The usual buildings stood around it; a cathedron, here with the round planet rather than the rayed Star at its dome, a porticoed city hall, mansions. A speaker’s podium had been erected in the center around the sculptured fountain, and several thousand men stood in front of it. Pretty well all men, as opposed to the crowd back along the streets, and many of them armed.

  He sized up the group on the dais. A tall thin-featured man in three-quarter armor; that would be High Colonel Strezman. Blade features framed by long white hair streaked with black, penetrating blue eyes, and about a company of his dragoons on the pavement below, apart from a clump of officers. The syndics of the town had as many of their militia with them, and they stood on the opposite side of the podium—interesting evidence of a potential split. The heads of the guilds were there as well, each with his entourage behind him and supporters clumped on the cobblestones—merchants, artisans, and big clumps of ragged dezpohblado laborers ranged beside the laborers’ chiefs. Many of the individual magnates had their guards with them as well, variously equipped; there was a big clump of men in robe and ha’ik, or turbans and long coats and sashes, also armed. The Colonial merchants.

  Sure to be against us, Raj thought. The Colony and the Civil Government routinely used economic sanctions and outright attacks on each other’s resident citizens as part of their ongoing struggle.

  De Roors came to the front of the podium as soon as the greeting rituals were out of the way. He raised his hands to still the low murmurs and spoke:

  “Citizens of Lion City! We are here to listen to the embassy of General Whitehall and the Civil Government army camped outside the walls of our city. To do us honor, General Whitehall has sent the noblest of his officers to treat with us; none other than the Most Excellent Cabot Clerett, nephew to the Governor of the Civil Government himself!”

 

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