Hope Rearmed

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Hope Rearmed Page 42

by David Drake


  None loose . . . He looked back at the road. Poplanich’s Own was moving forward, all except the banner group. They were halted around something in the roadway. Raj walked that way, one arm braced around the pommel of his saddle for support. Ehwardo’s dog was lying dead in the roadway, neck broken and skull crushed. Ehwardo lay not far from it. His left side from the floating ribs down was mostly gone, bone showing pinkish-white through the torn flesh, blood flowing past the pressure-bandages his men tried to apply. From the way the other leg flopped his back was broken, which was probably a mercy. The battalion chaplain was kneeling by his side, lifting the Headset from the last touch to the temples.

  Raj knelt. The older man’s eyes were wandering; not long, then. They passed over Raj, blinked to an instant’s recognition. His lips formed a word.

  “I will,” Raj said loudly, leaning close.

  Ehwardo had a wife and four children; including one young boy who would be alone in a world decidedly unfavorable to the Poplanich gens.

  The eyes rolled up. Raj joined as all present kissed their amulets, then stood.

  “Break off,” he said harshly to the Senior Captain. “Sound recall. The gate will be open, this time.”

  Suzette drew up on her palfrey Harbie, beside the banner of the 5th. “Oh, damnation,” she said. “He was a good man.”

  Raj nodded curtly. He would have made a better Governor than Barholm, he thought.

  no. Center’s mental voice fell flat as stone. he would have been a man of peace, nor would he have had the ruthlessness necessary to break internal resistance to change.

  Don’t we need peace? Raj thought. Can’t anyone but a sicklefoot in human form hold the Chair?

  peace can only come through unity. barholm clerett is an able administrator with a strong grip on power, able to cow the bureaucracy and the nobility both, and he will not rest until bellevue is unified. therefore he is the only suitable governor under present circumstances.

  And I have to conquer the Earth for him, Raj thought bitterly. Him and Chancellor Tzetzas.

  bellevue, Center corrected. earth will come long after your time. otherwise, essentially correct.

  Both units’ trumpets sang in a complex interplay. Men wrapped the body of Ehwardo Poplanich and laid him on a gun-caisson; others were collecting loose dogs and the wounded, and enemy weapons.

  After a moment, Raj spoke aloud: “I’m bad luck to the Poplanich name,” he said.

  “It’s not your fault, darling,” Suzette murmured.

  “Didn’t say it was,” he replied, in a tone like iron. “Didn’t say it was.”

  The gates were open. Regulars lined the roadway, saluting as Raj rode in, and again for Ehwardo’s body. The militia stood further back, expressions hang-dog. Troopers of Poplanich’s Own spat on them as they rode by, and the townsmen looked down meekly, not even trying to dodge.

  Gerrin Staenbridge was waiting just inside the gate; standing orders forbade him to be outside the walls at the same time as Raj.

  “The city’s on full alert,” he said. Then: “Damn” as he saw the commander of Poplanich’s Own.

  His eyes went back to the militia who’d barred the gate. “What’s your orders concerning them, mi heneral?”

  Raj shrugged. “Decimation,” he said flatly.

  “Not all of them?”

  “Some of them may be of use later,” Raj went on. “Although right now, I can’t imagine what.”

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  A color party and escort met Teodore Welf at the main north gate of Old Residence. He exchanged salutes with the officer in charge of it, a man younger than himself with a hook in place of his left hand. He was small and dark in the Eastern manner, smelling of lavender soap and clean-shaven, smooth-cheeked—almost a caricature of the sissified grisuh. Apart from that hook, and the cut-down shotgun worn holstered over one shoulder, and the flat cold killer’s eyes. His Namerique was good but bookishly old-fashioned, with a singsong Sponglish lilt and a trace of a southron roll to the R’s, as if he’d spoken it mainly with Squadron folk.

  “Enchanted to make your acquaintance, Lord Welf,” he said. “Blindfolds from here, I’m afraid.”

  Teodore tore his gaze from the rebuilt ramparts above, and the tantalizing hints of earthworks beyond the gate. He could see that the moat had been dug out; the bottom was full of muddy water, and sharpened stakes. The edge of the cut looked unnaturally neat, as if shaped by a gardener, but the huge heaps of soil that should have shown from so much digging were entirely missing. The distinctive scent of new-set cement mortar was heavy, and sparks and iron clanging came from the tops of the towers; smiths at work.

  The soft cloth covered his eyes, and someone took the reins of his dog. Normal traffic sounds and town-smells came beyond, with a low murmur at the sight of the Brigade banner beside him. An occasional shout to make way, in accented Spanjol. Once or twice a member of the escort said something; Teodore had trouble following it, although he spoke the eastern tongue well. The men around him pronounced it with a nasal twang, and many words he’d never read in any Sponglish book. The feeling of helplessness was oddly disorienting, like being ill. Mounted troops went by, and the rumbling of guns passing over irregular pavement. Minutes passed, even with the dogs at a fast walk; Old Residence was a big city.

  By the time the echoes changed to indicate they’d pulled out into the main plaza, Teodore Welf was getting a little annoyed. Only the thought that he was supposed to be annoyed kept it within bounds. Someone was drilling men on foot in the plaza, and he recognized enough Sponglish swearwords to know that whoever it was was not happy with them. If Raj Whitehall was trying to make soldiers out of Old Residence militia, then probably all parties concerned were quite desperately unhappy. The thought restored some of his cheer as he was helped to dismount and guided up steps with a hand under his elbow. One of the other emissaries stumbled and swore.

  Cold metal slid between the blindfold and his skin, light as the touch of a butterfly.

  “Be quite still, now,” the lilting voice said next to his ear.

  The cloth fell away, sliced neatly through. He blinked as light returned. The faded, shabby-at-the-edges splendor of the Governor’s Council Chamber was familiar enough. They went through marbled corridors with high coffered ceilings and tall slim pillars along the sides, and into the domed council hall itself. The rising semicircular tiers of benches were full, with the Councilors in their best; carbide lamps in the dome above reflected from the white stone and pale wood. Teodore stiffened in anger to see that the Brigade banner had been taken down from behind the podium, leaving the gold and silver Starburst once more with pride of place.

  There were a few other changes. The guards at the door were in Civil Government uniform of blue swallowtail coat and maroon pants and round bowl-helmets with chainmail neckguards. The Chair of the First Citizen was occupied by a man in an officer’s version of the same outfit; on a table beside him was a cushion bearing a steel mace inlaid with precious metals.

  Whitehall, the Brigade noble thought. He clicked heels and inclined his head slightly; the easterner nodded. A woman sat on the consort’s seat one step below him; even then, Teodore gave her a second glance that had little to do with the splendor of her East Residence court garb. Woof, he thought.

  Then the general’s gray eyes met his. Teodore Welf had fought in a thunderstorm once, with a blue nimbus playing over the lanceheads and armor of his men. The skin-prickling sensation was quite similar to this. He remembered the battle at the railroad bridge and along the road, the eerie feeling of being watched and anticipated and never knowing what was going to hit him next.

  He shook it off. His general had given him a task to do.

  “. . . and so, Councilors, even now the Lord of Men is willing to forgive you for allowing a foreign interloper to seize and man the fortifications which the 591st Provisional Brigade has held against all enemies for so long. Full amnesty, conditional on the eastern troops leaving the city within t
wenty-four hours. We will even allow the enemy three days’ grace before pursuit, or a week if they agree to leave by sea and trouble the Western Territories no more.

  “Consider well,” the Brigade ambassador concluded, “how many kilometers of wall surround this great city, and how few, how very few, the foreign troops are. Far too few to hold it against the great host of the Lord of Men, which even now makes camp outside. Take heed and take His Mightiness’s mercy, before you feel his anger.”

  Raj smiled thinly. Not a bad performance, he thought. A good many of the Councilors were probably sweating hard right now. This Teodore Welf certainly looked the part, with his sternly handsome young face and long blond locks falling to the shoulderplates of his armor. He’d spoken like an educated man, too—fought like one, in the skirmishes with the vanguard of the Brigadero army. The two other officers beside him were older, scarred veterans in their forties. Their speeches had been shorter, and their Spanjol much more accented.

  “Most eloquent,” Raj said dryly. “However, Lord Welf, I speak for this noble Council; as one of their member”—his family were hereditary Councilors in the Civil Government, a minor honor there—“and as duly appointed commander of the armed forces of the Civil Government of Holy Federation, under the orders of the Sole Rightful Autocrat Barholm Clerett. Against which and whom the 591st Provisional Brigade is in a state of unlawful mutiny. You are the foreigner here. General Forker was a rebellious vassal—”

  In soi-disant theory the Brigade held the Western Territories as “delegates” of the Chair; a face-saving arrangement dating back to the original invasion, when General Teodore Amalson had been persuaded to move into the Western Territories after harassing East Residence for a generation. Old Residence had already been in the hands of a “garrison” of barbarian mercenaries for a long lifetime before that. Old Amalson had solved that problem with blunt pragmatism; he’d killed all their leaders at a banquet and massacred the rank-and-file next day.

  “—and your marriage-kinsman Ingreid Manfrond is not even a vassal, being a usurper. Let me further point out that neither you Brigaderos nor any other barbarians built this city or its walls—you couldn’t even keep them in repair. It has returned to its rightful rulers, and we intend to keep it. If you think you can take it away from us, you’re welcome to try, with hard blows and not with words. Siegecraft is not something the Brigade has ever excelled at, and I predict you’ll break your teeth on this nut before you crack it. Meanwhile you’ll be camping in the mud and getting sick, while the people rise up behind you and the northern savages burn your undefended homes.

  “Go back, Lord Welf,” Raj went on. “Use your eloquence on your compatriots. Tell them to end their rebellion now, while they have their lives and land, before they’re hunted fugitives cowering in caves and woods. Because the Sovereign Mighty Lord has entrusted me with the task of reducing the Western Territories and all in them to obedience. Which I will do by whatever means are necessary.”

  “So, what’s this Whitehall fellow like?” Ingreid Manfrond said.

  Ingreid and Teodore and Carstens were alone now. Teodore put his booted feet up on the chest. The servant clucked and began unbuckling the mud-splashed greaves; another handed him a goblet of mulled Sala with spices. The commander’s tent was like a small house and lavishly furnished, but it already had a frowsty smell. The young man frowned; Ingreid was a pig. And he doesn’t know anything about women, he thought. The way he treats Marie is stupid. Dangerously stupid.

  It wouldn’t do to underestimate Ingreid, though. There was a boar’s cunning in the little eyes.

  “Whitehall?” Teodore said. As a relative by marriage to the General, he could leave out the honorifics in private. “About my height, looks to be around thirty. Dark even for an easterner, but his eyes are gray. A real fighting man, I’d say, from the way he’s built and from the look of his hands and face—a saddle-and-sword man, not a hilltop commander. Doesn’t waste words; told me right out that if we want the city, we can come and fight him for it. And . . . Lord of Men, you’ve got a real war on your hands. This is a man who warriors will follow.”

  Ingreid grunted thoughtfully, his hand caressing the hilt of his sword. “They say he has the demon’s luck, too.”

  “I don’t know about that, but I saw his wife—and they say she’s a witch. I can believe it.”

  Ingreid shook his head. “We’ll break him,” he said, with flat conviction. “No amount of luck means a turd when you’re outnumbered twenty to one.” His shoulders hunched unconsciously, the stance of a man determined to butt his way head-first through a brick wall or die trying.

  Carstens and the young officer exchanged a glance. I had him outnumbered and he killed two thousand of my best men, Teodore thought. He doubted Whitehall had lost more than a hundred or so. Of course, at that rate the Civil Government army would run out of men before the Brigade did . . . but victory bought at such a price would be indistinguishable from defeat.

  “What about the Civvies?” Carstens put in. “He can’t hold the city with only twenty thousand men if the natives don’t cooperate with him.”

  “The Council?” Teodore snorted. “They won’t crap without asking his permission, most of them. Scared of us, but more scared of him because he’s in there with them. We might do something with the Priest, though. Whitehall’s been leaning on the Civvie gentry pretty hard, they thought they’d watch the war like spectators at a bullfight and he’s not having any of that.”

  Carstens nodded. “I’ve got some tame Civvie priests hanging around,” he said. “We can get messages over the wall.”

  Ingreid flipped a hand. “You handle it then, Howyrd,” he said. “Get me an open gate, and you’re Hereditary Grand Constable.” Carstens grinned like a wolf; that would give his sons the title, if not necessarily the office.

  “Land?” he said. “I’d need more of an estate, to support that title.”

  “Those Councilors must have a million or two acres between them. The ones who stick to Whitehall will lose their necks—and you get your pick, after the Seat.”

  Teodore nodded thoughtfully. “And do I have your authority to oversee the encampment?” he asked.

  Both the other officers looked at him. “Sure, if you want it,” Ingreid said.

  It was routine work. Almost servant’s work . . . “We’re going to be here a while,” Teodore said. “Better to get it right. I don’t want us wasting men, we’ve already lost too many through Forker’s negligence.”

  “Eight camps?” Ingreid Manfrond said, peering at the map the younger man unrolled. “Why eight?”

  Teodore Welf cleared his throat. “Less chance of sickness if we spread the troops out, Lord of Men,” he said. “Or so the priests say.”

  It was also what Mihwel Obregon’s Handbook for Siege Operations said, but Teodore wasn’t going to tell his monarch the idea came out of a book, and a Sponglish book at that. He hadn’t taken everything in it all that seriously himself, when he read it—but since meeting the Civil Government’s army, their methods looked much more credible.

  Howyrd Carstens nodded, walking to the tent-flap and using his telescope on the walls of the city two kilometers distant.

  “Sounds good,” he said. “With twelve regiments in every camp, we’ll have enough to block any Civvie thrust out of the city more than long enough for the others to pile in.”

  “You think they’ll dare to come out?” Ingreid said, surprised.

  Teodore tossed back his mulled wine and held the goblet out for more. “Let’s put it this way, kinsman,” he said. “When we’ve got Whitehall’s head on a lance, I’ll relax.”

  “Have you seen those handless cows at drill, mi heneral?” Jorg Menyez said bitterly. “What’re they good for, except getting in the way of a bullet that might hit someone useful?”

  Raj chuckled without looking up from the big tripod-mounted binoculars. From the top of the north-gate tower the nearest enemy encampment sprang out at him, the raw reddish-
gray earth of the berm around it seeming within arm’s reach.

  “Others have been known to say the same thing about our infantry, Jorg,” he said, stepping back. “Grammeck, tell me what you think of those works.”

  The artilleryman bent to the eyepiece. The tower-top was crowded; in the center was a sandbagged emplacement for the 200-millimeter mortar, and movable recoil-ramps had been built near the front, timber slides at forty-five degree angles. Field-guns could run up them under recoil and return to battery by their own weight, saving a lot of time in action. A counterweighted platform at the rear of the tower gave quick access to ground level.

  Raj forestalled his infantry commander with a raised hand.

  “I know, I know. Still, we have to work with what we’ve got. I’m going to call for volunteers from the militia; since they’ll get full rations and pay—”

  “We can afford that?” Jorg said.

  “The Priest has agreed to pay a war-levy on ecclesiastical property,” Raj said. “I expect about ten thousand men to step forward.” They’d been drilling forty thousand or so, and employment was slow in a besieged city.

  “We’ll take the best five thousand of those. From that, cream off a company’s worth for each of your battalions, younger men with no local ties. We’ll enlist them, and you can begin full-time training. We’ve enough spare equipment for that many. At the least, they can stand watch while real soldiers sleep; I suspect we’re going to get constant harassing attacks soon.”

  He grinned. “And just to make you entirely miserable, you can also provide cadre for the rest; that’ll be about eight battalions of full-timers, armed with Brigade weapons. Again, they can replace regular infantry on things like guardia duty.”

  Jorg sighed and nodded. Grammeck looked up from the binoculars.

  “That looks uncomfortably like one of our camps,” he said. “Although they’re rather slow about it—a full week, and not finished yet.”

 

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