by David Drake
“And we’ve got their supplies cut off, too,” Ingreid said happily. His teeth showed yellow in a grin. “Slow-motion fighting, but you two have been doing well. When the wall comes down . . .”
“Don’t like to put everything in one basket,” Teodore said.
The older men laughed. “We’ve got another bullet in that revolver,” Carstens said. “They’ll all be looking this way—the best time to buttfuck ’em.”
CHAPTER TEN
“I’ll bloody well leave, that’s what I’ll do,” Cabot Clerett snarled, pacing the room. It was small and delicately furnished, lit by a single lamp. The silk hangings stirred slightly as he passed, wafting a scent of jasmine.
“Cabot, you can’t leave in the middle of a campaign; not when your career has begun so gloriously!” Suzette said.
“Whitehall obviously won’t let me out of his sight again,” Cabot said. “He doesn’t make mistakes twice. And all he’s doing is sitting here. I’ll go back and tell Uncle the truth about him. Then I’ll collect reinforcements, ten thousand extra men, and come back here and do it right.”
“Cabot, you can’t mean to leave me here?” Suzette said, her eyes large and shining.
“Only for a few months,” he said, sitting beside her on the couch.
She seized his hand and pressed it to her breast. “Not even for a moment. Promise me you won’t!”
“Let me out, my son,” the priest said shortly.
“I’m no son of yours, you bald pimp in a skirt,” the trooper growled. He was from the 1st Cruisers, a tall hulking man with a thick Namerique accent.
Savage, the priest thought. Worse than the Brigade, most of whom were at least minimally polite to the orthodox clergy.
The East Gate had a small postern exit, a narrow door in the huge main portal. A torch stood in a bracket next to it, and the flickering light caught on the rough wood and thick iron of the gate, cast shadows back from the towers on either side. A crackle of rifle-fire came from somewhere, perhaps a kilometer away. Faint shouting followed it; part of the continual cat-and-mouse game between besieger and besieged. Behind him Old Residence was mostly dark, the gasworks closed down for the duration as coal was conserved for heating and cooking. Lamps were few for the same reason, showing mellow gold against the blackness of night. The white puffs of the priest’s breath reminded him to slow his breathing.
“I have a valid pass,” he said, waving the document under the soldier’s nose. There was a trickle of movement in and out of the city, since it was advantageous to both sides.
“Indeed you do,” a voice said from behind him.
He whirled. A man stepped out of the shadow into the light of the torch; he was of medium height, broad-shouldered and deep-chested, with a swordsman’s thick wrists. Much too dark for an ex-Squadrone, a hard square beak-nosed face with black hair cut in a bowl around his head. Major Tejan M’brust, the Descotter Companion who commanded the 1st Cruisers. The priest swallowed and extended the pass.
“Signed by Messa Whitehall, right enough,” the officer said.
More of the 1st Cruiser troopers came out, standing around the cleric in an implacable ring. Their bearded faces were all slabs and angles in the torchlight; most still wore their hair long and knotted on the right side of their heads. He could smell the strong scent of sweat and dog and leather from them, like animals.
Another figure walked up beside M’brust and took the document. “Thank you, Tejan,” she said. A small slender woman wrapped in a white wool cloak, her green eyes colder than the winter night. “Yes, I signed it. I did wonder why anyone would take the risk of leaving the city just to fetch a copy of the Annotations of the Avatar Sejermo. The man couldn’t understand the plain sense of the Handbooks himself and he’s been confusing others ever since.”
The priest’s hand made a darting motion toward his mouth. The troopers piled onto him, one huge calloused hand clamping around his jaw and the other hand ripping the paper out of his lips. He gagged helplessly, then froze as a bayonet touched him behind one ear.
Suzette Whitehall took the damp crumpled paper and held it fastidiously between one gloved finger and thumb. “In cipher,” she said. “Of course.” She held it to the light. The words were gibberish, but they were spaced and sized much like real writing. “A substitution code.”
The relentless green gaze settled on him. Her expression was as calm as a statue, but the Descotter officer beside her was grinning like a carnosauroid. He threw back his cloak and held up one hand, with a pair of armorer’s pliers in it, and clacked them.
The priest moistened his lips. “My person is inviolate,” he said. “Under canon law, a priest—”
“The city is under martial law,” Suzette said.
“Church law takes precedence!”
“Not in the Gubernio Civil, Reverend Father.”
“I will curse you!”
The marble mask of Suzette’s face gave a slight upward curve of the lips. Tejan M’brust laughed aloud.
“Well, Reverend Father,” he said, “that might alarm ordinary soldiers. I really don’t think my boys will much mind, seeing as they’re all This Earth heretics.”
The hands holding him clamped brutally as he struggled. “And,” M’brust went on, “I’m just not very pious.”
“Raj Whitehall is the Sword of the Spirit,” Suzette said. “He is a pious man . . . which is why I handle things like this for him.” She turned her head to the soldiers. “Sergeant, take him into the guardhouse there. Get the fireplace going, and bring a barrel of water.”
“Ya, mez,” the man said in Namerique: yes, lady.
M’brust clacked his pliers once more, turning his wrist in obscene parody of a dancer with castanets. “They say priests have no balls,” he said. “Shall we see?”
The priest began to scream as the soldiers pulled him into the stone-lined chamber, heels dragging over the threshold. The thick door clanked shut, muffling the shrieks.
Even when they grew very loud.
“Not much longer,” Gerrin Staenbridge said.
The thick fabric of the tower shook under their feet. A section of the stone facing fell into the moat with an earthquake rumble. The rubble core behind the three-meter blocks was brick and stone and dirt, but centuries of trickling water had eaten pockets out of it. The next round gouged deep, and the whole fabric of the wall began to flex. Dust rose in choking clouds, hiding the bluffs two kilometers away. The sun was rising behind them, throwing long shadows over the cleared land ahead. The ragged emplacements along the bluffs were already in sunlight, gilded by it, and it was out of that light that the steady booming rumble of the siege guns sounded.
“Time to go,” Raj agreed.
They walked to the rear of the tower and each stepped a foot into a loop of rope. The man at the beam unlocked his windlass.
“I’ll play it out slow like,” he said. “And watch yor step, sirs.”
Gerrin smiled, teeth white in the shadow of the stone. When they had descended a little, he spoke.
“I think he was telling us what he thought of officers who stay too long in a danger zone. Insolent bastard.”
The tower shook again, and small chunks of rock fell past them. Raj grinned back. “True. On the other hand, what do you suggest as punishment?”
“Assign him to the rearguard on the tower,” Gerrin said, and they both laughed.
There were dummies propped up all along the section of wall the Brigade guns were battering, but there had to be some real men to move and fire up until the last minute, before they rappelled down on a rope and ran for it. All of them were volunteers, and men who volunteered for that sort of duty weren’t the sort whose blood ran cold at an officer’s frown.
They reached the bottom and mounted the waiting dogs, trotting in across the cleared zone. Raj stood in his stirrups to survey the whole area inside the threatened stretch of wall. The construction gangs had been busy; for an area a kilometer long and inward in a semicircle eight hun
dred meters deep, every house had been knocked down. The ruins had been mined for building stone and timbers; what was left was shapeless rubble, no part of it higher than a man’s waist. Lining the inner edge of the rubble was a new wall, twice the height of a man. It was not very neat—they had incorporated bits and pieces of houses into it, taking them as they stood—and it was not thick enough to be proof against any sort of artillery. It was bulletproof, and pierced with loopholes along its entire length, on two floors. The ground just in front of it was thick with a barricade of timbers. Thousands of Brigadero swordblades had been hammered into them and then honed to razor sharpness.
The falling-anvil chorus of the bombardment continued behind them. The tower lurched, and a segment of its outer surface broke free and fell, a slow-motion avalanche. Very faintly, they could hear the sound of massed cheering from the enemy assault troops waiting in the lee of the bluffs.
Raj grinned like a shark at the sound. He hated battles . . . in the abstract, and afterwards. During one he felt alive as at no other time; everything was razor-clear, all the ambiguities swept away. It was the pure pleasure of doing something you did very well, and if it said something unfavorable about him that he could only experience that purity in the middle of slaughter, so be it.
“Good morning, Messers,” he said to the assembled officers, once they were inside the interior wall. The room looked to have been some burgher’s parlor, with a rosewood table now dusty and battered. Over his shoulder: “Get the rest of them off the wall. The enemy will be expecting that about now.
“Now,” he said, tapping his hands together to firm up the gloves. The juniors were looking at him expectantly.
tell them, Center said. as i have told you, over the years.
Raj nodded. “We’re receiving a demonstration,” he said, “of two things. The advantage of numbers, and the benefits of fortification.”
He looked around and settled an eye on Captain Pinya. “What’s the primary advantage of superior numbers, Captain?”
The infantryman flushed. “Greater freedom to pursue multiple avenues of attack, sir,” he said.
“Correct. Most of the really definitive ways to thrash an enemy in battle involve, when you come right down to it, pinning him with one part of your forces and hitting him elsewhere with another. The greater your numbers, the easier that is to do. If you have enough of an advantage, you can compel the other side to retreat or surrender without fighting at all. Those of you who were with me back in the Southern Territories will remember that the Squadron had a very large advantage in numbers—although they had a substantial disadvantage in combat effectiveness.
“In fact, they could have made us leave by refusing to fight except defensively. Keep a big force hovering some distance from us, and use the rest to cut off our foraging parties. Pretty soon we’d have had to either charge right into them, or starve, or leave. Instead they obligingly charged straight into our guns themselves.
“You have to attack to win, but the defensive is stronger tactically,” Raj went on, looking down at the map.
“It’s effectively a force magnifier. So is fortification, as long as you don’t get too stuck to it. In a firefight, a man standing behind a wall is worth five times one running toward him; one reason why I’m known as the ‘King of Spades.’ You may note that here we’re outnumbered by five to one . . . but the Brigade has to attack. That effectively puts us on an equal footing, and restores the tactical flexibility which the enemy’s superior numbers denies us.
“That, gentlemen,” he went on, tapping the map, “is the essence of my plans for this action.” There was a place marked for every unit on the paper, but nobody’s plan survived contact with the enemy. “We use the fortifications to magnify the effect of our blocking forces, which in turn frees up reserves for decisive action elsewhere, with local superiority. I remind you that we’re still operating on a very narrow margin here. Our edge is the speed of reaction which our greater flexibility and discipline provide. I expect intelligent boldness from all of you.”
The meeting broke up as men dispersed to their units. Staenbridge was the last to leave.
“Kick their butts, Gerrin,” Raj said.
They slapped fists, wrist to wrist inside and then outside. “My pleasure, Whitehall,” the other man said.
“Spirit of Man,” rifleman Minatelli said.
From the second story firing platform he had an excellent view of the city wall going down. He had lived all his life in Old Residence, working in the family’s stonecutting shop. It was like watching part of the universe disappear. The quivering at the top of the wall got worse, the whole edifice buckling like a reed fence in a high wind. Then the last sway outward didn’t stop; at first it was very slow, a long toppling motion. Then it was gone, leaving only a rumbling that went on and on until he thought it was an earthquake and the whole city would shake down around his ears. Dust towered up toward the sun. When it was over the wall was just a ridge of tumbled stone, with a few snags standing up from it where the tower had been.
A cannonball struck with a giant crack and fragments of stone blasted around it. The next round came through the gap, burying itself in the rubble. Minatelli had never felt so alone, even though there were men on either side of him, nearly one per meter as far as he could see. The platoon commander was a little way off, chewing on the end of an unlit stogie and leaning on his sheathed saber.
Minatelli swallowed convulsively. The man down on one knee at the next loophole was a veteran of twice his age named Gharsia. He was chewing tobacco and spat brownly out the slit in the stone in front of him before he turned his head to the recruit.
“Sight yor rifle yet?” he said.
“Nnn-no,” the young man said, straining to understand.
He’d spoken a little Sponglish before he volunteered; the priest in their neighborhood taught letters and some of the classical tongue to poor children. A month in the ranks had taught him the words of command, the names for parts of a rifle and an immense fund of scatology. He still found most of the rankers difficult to understand. Why did I enlist? he thought. The pay was no better than a stonecutter’s. The priest had said it was Holy Federation Church’s work, and he’d finally gotten between Melicie Guyterz’s legs the time he got to go back to the home street in uniform. The memory held small consolation. He certainly hadn’t been the first one there.
“Gimme.” The older man picked up Minatelli’s weapon and clicked the grooved ramp forward under the rear sight, raising the notch.
“Das’ seven hunnert,” Gharsia said. “Aim ad ter feet. An’ doan’ forget to set it back when dey pass de marks.”
He passed the weapon back. “An’ wet der foresight,” he said, licking his thumb and doing that to his own rifle.
Minatelli tried to do the same, but his mouth was too dry. He fumbled with his canteen for a second and swallowed a mouthful of cold water that tasted of canvas.
“Gracez,” he said. Thanks.
The veteran spat again. “Ever’ one you shoot, ain’t gonna shoot me,” he said. “We stop ’em, er they kill us all.”
The young man braced his rifle through the slit and watched the field of rubble and the great plume of dust at the end of it. It occurred to him that if he hadn’t enlisted, he’d be at home waiting with his family—completely helpless, instead of mostly so. That made him feel a little better, as he snuggled the chilly stock of his rifle against his cheek.
“Could be worse,” he heard the veteran say. “Could be rainin’.” The day was overcast, but dry so far. The light was gray and chill around him, making faces look as if they were already dead.
Footsteps sounded on the wood of the parapet behind him. He turned his head, and then froze. Captain Pinya, the Company Commander—and Major Felasquez, and Messer Raj himself.
“Carry on, son,” Messer Raj said. He looked unbelievably calm as he bent to look through the slit. A companionable hand rested on the young soldier’s shoulder. “You’ve got you
r rifle sights adjusted correctly, I see. Good man.”
They walked on, and the tense waiting silence fell again. “Y’ owe me a drink, lad,” Gharsia said. Some of the other troopers chuckled.
“Up yours,” Minatelli replied. It didn’t seem so bad now, but he wished something would happen.
“Upyarz!”
The white pennant showed over the edge of the western gate. That was the signal. The Brigade-Colonel swung his sword forward, and the regiment poured after him. They were very eager; nobody had been told why they were held here, away from the attack everyone knew was coming on the other side of the city. It had to be kept secret, only the colonel and his immediate staff, and they informed by General Ingreid himself and his closest sworn men. Sullenness turned to ardor as he gave them the tale in brief words.
“We’re getting a gate opened for us, boys,” he said. “Straight in, chop any easterners you see, hold the gate for the rest of the host. Then the city’s ours.”
“Upyarz!” the men roared, and pounded into a gallop behind him. None of them had enjoyed sitting and eating half-rations or less in the muddy, stinking camps. He didn’t envy the citizens of Old Residence when the unit brothers were through with them.
The road stretched out ahead of him, muddy and potholed. The dogs were out of condition, but they’d do for one hard run to the gate. Get in when the Civvie militiamen opened it, hold it and a section of the wall. The following regiments would pour through into the city and the defense would disintegrate like a glass tumbler falling on rock. They’d take Whitehall from behind over to the east, the way the wild dog took the miller’s wife.
He was still grinning at the thought when his dog gave a huge yelping bark and twisted into the air in a bucking heave. The Brigade officer flew free, only a lifetime’s instinct curling him in midair. He landed with shocking force, and something stabbed into his thigh with excruciating pain. It came free in his hand, a thing of four three-inch nails welded together so that a spike would be uppermost however it lay. A caltrop . . .