by K. J. Parker
Ziani crawled closer. “Daurenja?” he said.
A tiny movement, as he tried to turn his head, and a horrible bubbling noise.
“I just wanted to thank you,” Ziani said. “When I was at a loss for an escapement, I found you, you and your stupid bloody invention.” He grinned, and the one eye blinked. “It didn’t work,” he said. “Well, I guess you know that. It was the cold spot. I warned you, but you didn’t want to know. The gate’s still there, and just look at you. Can you hear me? I want you to hear what I’m saying. I want you to know you failed. I succeeded, and you…”
Dust, drifting down from the air, settled on the surface of Daurenja’s eye, but the lid didn’t twitch. Drawing a deep breath, Ziani crawled a little closer, sucked and spat on the shattered face. No movement. He breathed out slowly. I’ll miss him, he thought.
There wasn’t much left of the weapon: one large fragment of the tube, concave, like an empty walnut shell, and a few splinters of the wooden frame. The rest of the tube and the powder pot had gone. Well, Ziani thought, so much for love. The trouble is, there’s always a cold spot, and when it gives way, something like this is bound to happen.
He brushed blood out of his eye with the side of his hand. Blood would have to do instead of tears; he couldn’t find any of those for Daurenja, the scholar, the inventor, the arch-abominator, the best engineer he’d ever known. Better than me, he added, surprised at the conclusion, but love was his undoing.
“Is he… ?” Someone behind him, talking in a very small, quiet voice.
“Yes,” Ziani replied without looking round. “His gadget didn’t work after all. Give me a hand up,” he added, and he felt himself lifted to his feet. “Let’s get away from here, before the Mezentines start shooting at us.”
The other survivors of the carrying party joined them as they scrambled down the bank to the ditch. As they crossed it, a scorpion bolt missed them by no great margin. After that, they made good time to the cover of the trench.
The man who’d helped him to his feet confirmed his account of the death of the general and the failure of his device. The war council listened in dead silence, and Ziani nodded to him to leave.
“Which means,” he said, his voice clear and steady (because the worst was over now, and the hardest part successfully concluded), “we’re in a pretty bad way. In fact,” he added, looking round the ring of blank, unhappy faces, “it’s hard to see how it could be worse. Sure, we got past the ditch and took the embankment, and we killed a lot of men. But the walls and the gates are still there, our secret weapon didn’t work, we can’t build another one even if we wanted to, and the general’s dead. Talking of which,” he added forcefully (and nobody looked interested in interrupting him), “someone’s got to take his place. I don’t see Duke Valens here. Didn’t anybody tell him about the meeting?”
One of the Aram Chantat cleared his throat; a small, dry man. “The duke was told about what happened,” he said, “but he was not disposed to attend. We take this to mean that he is no longer concerned with the conduct of the war, which is fortuitous. We have no confidence in him.”
Ziani nodded. “In that case,” he said, “who do you want to… ?”
The dry man looked at him; and even though he’d prevailed and nothing could stop him now, the intensity of the stare made him uncomfortable. “We feel there is only one possible choice,” he said. “You are the senior engineer, and you alone have the expertise. We are in your hands.”
Yes, Ziani thought; but he said, “That’s true as far as the technical side goes, but surely one of you…”
The dry man shook his head. “We have already decided,” he said. “Short of an outright refusal, you have no choice.”
He’d never lost the feeling of wonder that came from the soft, firm click of a component fitting perfectly into place: the snick of a ratchet, of a locking bolt feeling its way exactly into its appointed place. A machine works because each part of the mechanism goes where it’s designed to go, entirely constrained in its movement by the other pieces. The precise fit is because there’s nowhere else it can go; because it has no choice. “I suppose you’re right,” Ziani mumbled. “And I suppose I’d better accept.” He paused for a moment, trying to look as though the whole weight of the world had come to settle on his shoulders, though of course the reverse was true. “But if you want me to do this, you’re going to have to trust me. Really trust me, I mean. Otherwise, you’ll all have to go and be extremely polite to Duke Valens, because I won’t be able to help you.”
The dry man was still looking at him, but the stare no longer bothered him. There were no more choices for anyone. “Of course,” the dry man said. “You have our unequivocal support in everything, General Vaatzes.”
He allowed himself a grin. “Not that word, please,” he said. “Just engineer, if you’ve got to call me something, and on the whole I’d rather you didn’t.” He settled himself in his chair, like a man who had just come home. “Now, the first thing I need to do is arrange a parley with Chairman Psellus.”
He came back from the meeting two hours later, and reconvened the war council. “They won’t surrender,” he said. “I didn’t really imagine that they would, but it was worth trying.”
An Aram Chantat said: “But we don’t want their surrender. We want to sack the City and burn it to the ground.”
Ziani grinned. “That’s what I told them,” he said. “I guess that’s why they weren’t keen. I told them that if they opened the gates, we’d march them to the edge of the desert. They could go to where you’ve just come from, and take their chances with your cousins whose names I can never remember. No skin off your noses, since you’re going to be settling here permanently. But Psellus didn’t like the idea. He said that if they were all going to die, they might as well save themselves the long walk. That’s my people for you. We never did like walking much.”
A silence, rather awkward. “And now we continue with the assault,” someone said.
“Yes.” Ziani closed his eyes for a moment. “Yes, we continue with the assault. Which means,” he went on, sitting up a little straighter, and opening the file of papers he’d brought with him, “an artillery barrage to neutralise the batteries on the wall, and a new advance trench. This is what I’d been hoping to avoid, gentlemen, but we don’t seem to have an alternative, and of course we’re dangerously short of time. We have to undermine the main gate, which means digging a sap under it. That involves cutting a chamber at least three hundred yards long through the bedrock, which means our Vadani miners are going to be working very hard indeed for the cause. You can more or less guarantee that the Mezentines will try and countermine us, so we can expect to have to fight underground. If we had plenty of time, I’d say leave the work to the specialists, the Vadani, but my best guess would be three or four months before we got under the gate. With strict rationing, we can supply ourselves for three weeks; after that, we need to get at the Mezentine food reserves, or we starve. So that means we have to approach the job the other way: everybody in the army, apart from the artillery crews and the Vadani specialists – I want to save them for the final breakthrough – is going to have to get a spade or a pick and start digging.” He looked up at the ring of faces around him. “I need to know right now if that’s acceptable. If not, I can’t help you.”
“We will do what you tell us to do,” an Aram Chantat said. Presumably he had the authority. “Tell us your requirements and we’ll see to it.”
Ziani nodded, and picked up a sheet of paper. “These are just rough estimates,” he said. “I propose five shifts – that’s one fifth of the available manpower, working a four-hour shift, with fifteen-minute changeovers. Here” – he stabbed at a map with his finger –” is where we start digging. You’ll see it’s out in the open, well within range of the walls, but we haven’t got time to start further back, we’ll have to rely on the artillery to cover us. That means I want all the Eremians and Vadani back at the artillery park; no disrespect
, but the Aram Chantat don’t make good bombardiers; as well as working the machines, they’ll be gathering and shifting rock and rubble for ammunition, fixing broken machines, building new ones to replace the ones we can’t salvage. It’s essential that we keep the bombardment going, day and night; it’s not just a question of keeping their heads down, we need to make them believe we’re trying to bash a hole in the wall, so they’ll expect an assault with ladders and towers and divide their resources.” He paused for breath, and for effect. “Is all that acceptable?” he asked briskly. “If it’s not, you should say so now. We simply don’t have time to change our minds once we’ve started; we decide what we’re going to do here and now, and then we stick to it. Is that agreed?”
When the meeting ended, Ziani left the Aram Chantat to organise their own people into shifts, and went to brief the artillery. He sent the Vadani out to gather stones and rubble, and assigned the Eremians to patching up the machines. Then he called in the battery captains. They told him how many machines were still working, how many could be fixed, how many trained crew were available, how much finished ammunition they still had. He was particularly interested in the onagers and the scorpions, and when they pointed out that there were more usable machines than trained men to work them, he told them to take men off the long-range weapons, the trebuchets and mangonels, to ensure that all the short-range engines were fully manned. Then he dismissed his staff and went to talk to Duke Valens; just a courtesy call, he said, to put him in the picture and make sure he didn’t intend to interfere with the arrangements.
Observers he’d sent forward directly after the war council closed came back with the news that the Mezentine batteries were now fully manned; they were winching huge quantities of ammunition up to the wall with giant cranes, as well as brand-new machines, presumably straight off the production lines. The estimates they gave him suggested that the Mezentines had the edge in numbers of engines, though their long-range capacity was significantly less: two thirds of their machines were scorpions, while most of their trebuchets had been smashed up in earlier engagements and didn’t appear to have been replaced. Ziani received the news with a distracted nod of the head, and went back to examining ammunition inventories.
Two hours after the war council, Aram Chantat staff officers reported that the first shift was ready, with the other four shifts standing by. As ordered, every man had a spade, a pick or a shovel instead of his usual equipment, they’d taken off their armour and they were ready to go.
“All right,” Ziani said. “Get them moving. You know where to go.”
An officer frowned at him. “With respect,” he said, “shouldn’t you start the bombardment first? Otherwise—”
“We start shooting when they start,” Ziani snapped back. “Not before.”
He watched as the first shift marched out into the empty plain: seventy-five thousand men, according to the roster. Five shifts of seventy-five thousand men, shifting five square feet of dirt each; you could change a country out of all recognition in a week. He shook his head. So much effort, so great an effect, all to accomplish such a simple objective. But it was too late to change anything now. The escapement was running, and very soon it’d all be over. He beckoned to one of his aides (didn’t know the man’s name; didn’t care).
“Take this letter to Duke Valens,” he said.
*
Valens read the letter, screwed it up into a ball and threw it on to the little charcoal brazier. “I’m just going out for a while,” he said.
She looked at him. “Where are you going?” she asked.
“It’s all right,” he said. He was looking round for something. “You haven’t seen that hanger, have you?”
“I don’t know,” she replied. “What’s a hanger?”
“Shortish sword, with a sort of curved bit on the hilt. I put it down somewhere, but…”
“What do you need a sword for?”
He shrugged. “Not properly dressed without one,” he replied. “Ah, here it is. It’s lucky,” he added, smiling bleakly. “At least, that’s the theory. Hasn’t actually brought me much luck so far, but there’s still time.”
She caught her breath. “Is something going on?” she said. “I thought you said you were out of it now.”
“I am,” he replied, not looking at her. “That bastard Vaatzes is in charge now, and welcome.”
“What did he want to talk to you about?”
“Oh, nothing much.” He was having trouble with the buckle of his sword-belt; not like him at all. Usually, all his movements were so precise.
“Was it about the war?” she asked.
“Everything’s about the war,” he said; and she thought, he doesn’t really mean that.
The tent-flap opened, and she saw Miel Ducas standing in the light. “Are you ready?” he asked. He didn’t seem to have noticed she was there.
“As I’ll ever be,” Valens replied. “All set?”
“Yes.”
Valens took a step forward, then turned back to face her. “I won’t be long,” he said. “And then there’ll be some things we’ll need to talk about.”
She shrugged. “I’ll be here,” she replied. “Sewing something, probably,” she added.
He nodded, no expression at all on his face. Then he left and the flap dropped back, shuttering out the daylight.
Miel had brought a horse for him, and held his stirrup as he mounted. “Are you all right?” he asked.
“Of course,” he answered irritably. “I’m not a cripple or anything.”
“You heard about Daurenja.”
“Yes.” Valens picked up the reins. “You know,” he said, “I’ve been in charge of everything around me practically all my life. It’s nice to have someone else running things for a change.”
Miel shrugged. “You say that now,” he said.
Valens laughed. “Hardly matters what I say,” he said. “And what about you? Are you going to use the title? Only, Duke Ducas is a bit of a mouthful.”
“People can call me what they like,” Miel replied.
They rode together in silence for a while; then Miel said, “Are you really going to accept this?”
“Yes,” Valens said. “For now, anyway. Things may change later, of course. But right now, it’s the only realistic course open to me.”
Miel nodded; but he said, “I really don’t want to do this.”
“It’s no big deal,” Valens replied.
Then they discussed technical matters: positions, tactics, co-ordination of movements, concealment of intentions and the element of surprise. As they rode over the top of the ridge and looked down, Valens reined in his horse and sat still for a moment.
“There aren’t enough of us,” he said.
“No,” Miel agreed. “But that’s all there is, so it’ll have to do.”
But he hadn’t meant it; because the sight of the Vadani cavalry, twenty thousand men-at-arms, standing in formation with lances at rest, was a glorious illusion, and he wanted to enjoy it for as long as he could. It made him think of his father, who believed in all this sort of thing, just as he believed in the hunt, and the concept of the good duke and the contract between ruler and people. Besides, he told himself, as they rode down to take their places at the head of the formation, Ziani Vaatzes thinks there’s enough of us, and he knows best.
“He’ll send a rider,” Miel was saying. “Till then, we just stay here still and quiet.”
There was a mild stir, a gentle buzz, as the artillerymen realised that Chairman Psellus had come up on to the wall. It hadn’t escaped anybody’s notice that he hadn’t been there when the enemy blew up the embankment and slaughtered all those people. It was curious: nobody really believed he’d gone away because he was afraid, or anything like that. He’d gone, they knew, because he’d been called away to deal with something more important; so if he was here now, it meant that whatever happened next mattered…
“We think it’s a work party,” someone was telling hi
m. “We sent a few scouts down; apparently they’re not armed, they’ve got digging tools. We put the number at somewhere between eighty and a hundred—”
“Yes, thank you,” Psellus said mildly. “I believe I know what’s happening.” Someone brought up a chair, and he sat down. “Their artillery.”
“A lot of activity,” whoever it was replied. “All the signs are, they’re getting ready to launch a massive bombardment, though oddly enough they’ve taken men off the trebuchets and put them on the—”
“Indeed.” Psellus wiped his nose, which was running. “Our artillery is ready, I take it?”
“As ordered,” the man replied briskly; a slight, anxious hesitation, then: “I take it you do know we’ve stood down the long-range engines and—”
“Yes, thank you.” He was looking straight ahead, at the huge square shape moving toward the city, and beyond it, to the enemy artillery. “You’ve done very well. Please make sure we’re ready to start shooting as soon as I give the order. Not before, under any circumstances. Is that quite clear?”
Whoever it was nodded. “Of course,” he said. Another pause, and then, “But you haven’t given us the targets yet,” he said, tactfully. “You did say to stand by and you’d give the targets when you were ready, but…”
Psellus sighed, like a man being chivvied into a task he’d have preferred to avoid. “Not quite yet,” he said. “Let’s all just stay still and quiet for now.”
Still and quiet, as though the world was holding its breath; until, some time later, whoever it was said, “Chairman, they’re practically within scorpion range now, surely we should be doing something…”
Psellus sighed again. “You’re quite right,” he said. “Tell the captains to target the main body of the enemy – is that the right expression? I mean that great big square of them coming towards us.”