by David Weber
“Sor Teb did,” Roger admitted. “That pocker is fast. I took out the arquebusier first, and by the time I’d shifted target, Teb was behind the throne and then gone.”
“It happens.” Pahner shrugged. “The important point is that we’ve got you back, along with most of your party. We’re into the gatehouse, and we’ve closed up our forces, too. Now all we have to do is break contact.”
“Poertena’s working on that,” Roger said. “We need to get everyone to this side of the gate, though. And we need to do it fast.”
Pahner looked at the traffic jam of turom, Mardukan mercenaries, porters, and hangers-on in the gateway and sighed.
“I don’t know about ‘fast,’ Your Highness. But we’ll get to work on it.”
“As long as the gate is cleared by . . .” Roger consulted his toot, “fifteen minutes from now.”
“Got it,” Kosutic said. “I’ll extricate some of the Vashin and get them out here as security, then get the noncombatants moving.”
“Do it,” Pahner agreed. “In the meantime, we need to start planning what disaster we’re going to have next.”
Poertena took another peek through the hole in the floor and shook his head.
“Come on, You’ Highness,” he muttered. “Time’s a’wastin’.”
“We’ve got company,” Kileti said from the demolished doorway. “There are Krath in the gate control room.”
“Good t’ing we smashed t’e control, t’en, huh? T’ese gates ain’t closing until somebody get a whole new set built. T’ey can drop t’e portcullis, but even t’at won’t be easy, not wit’ t’e way we jam it!”
“Yeah, but if they get into the second defense room, we’re cut off,” the rifleman pointed out.
“Yes,” one of the Vashin cavalrymen standing by the barrels of oil said. “And then we go kill some more of these Krath bastards.”
“Timing on t’is is tricky,” Poertena said, with another glance through the hole as the sound of axes biting into wood came from the far room. “I t’ink you Vashin better get in t’e other room and keep it clear, huh?”
“Right,” the Vashin NCO said, and nodded to his fellows. “Let’s go collect some horns, boys.”
Poertena shook his head as the four cavalrymen left the room.
“I swear, t’ose guys enjoy t’is shit.” There was movement below, and he saw the Diaspran infantry reforming and beginning a slow back march into the gut of the gate tunnel, all the while keeping up a steady crackle of rifle fire. “Almost time to start t’e ball.”
“Back one step, and fire!” Fain barked. His throat was raw from the combination of gun smoke, ash, and shouting, but the company was maintaining a good fire, and at least half of their steadiness was because of their confidence in the voice behind them. He wasn’t about to stop now. He did turn at the polite tap on a shoulder, though.
“Good morning, Captain Fain,” Roger said. “I need to adjust your orders slightly, if you don’t mind.”
Fain looked at the prince, then shook his head. He could tell by now when Roger was being tricky.
“Of course, Your Highness. How can the Carnan Battalion—what’s left of it—be of service?”
Roger winced at the qualification.
“Has it been bad?” he asked.
“Now that we have the Krath on a limited front, it’s much better,” Fain said, gesturing to the gate opening his men filled. “But the street fighting was quite bloody.”
“I’m sorry to hear that,” Roger said quietly. “I’m getting tired of losing friends.” He gazed into the smoke and ash for a heartbeat or two, then drew a sharp breath.
“We need to break contact sharpish,” he said more briskly. “Sergeant Major Kosutic has gotten everyone out of the way behind you, with the exception of one rank of Vashin. I need you to coordinate a high-firepower retreat to the rear of the gate area. It’s imperative that the city half of the gate tunnel be absolutely clear of all our people, including the wounded. Understood?”
Fain looked upward at the murderholes above him. He been half waiting for them to open up on his company at any moment, and he hadn’t enjoyed the mental image of that eventuality which his imagination had conjured up. Now, however, the thought of descending slaughter was downright comforting.
“Understood, Your Highness,” he replied, with a false-hand flick of grim amusement. “Will do.”
Poertena waved in an ineffectual attempt to disperse the smoke drifting up through the hole as the Diasprans went to a higher rate of fire. That wall of lead couldn’t be sustained for very long—individuals would quickly run out of ammunition, for one thing—but while it lasted, it permitted them to begin retreating, opening up the gap between them and the pressing Krath.
“I t’ink it’s time to get to work,” he said, as another volley of pistol shots sounded from the far room. He pulled out his wrench one last time and waited until the first Krath came into view through the hole.
“Say hello to my leetle priend!” he shouted, then swung over and down at the head of the barrel like a golfer.
Fain nodded as the first gush of fish oil fell through the holes. The Krath, who’d expected it to be hot or even boiling, were pleasantly surprised that it was neither. The slippery substance made it even harder for them to move forward over the bodies piling up in the tunnel, but as far as they were concerned, that was a more than equitable trade-off. Fain doubted they’d feel that way much longer.
“That’s right,” he whispered. “Just a little further. . . .”
Poertena rolled the third, massive barrel aside as the last of the oil gushed from it, then nodded at Neteri and pulled out a grenade.
“One, two, t’ree—”
He thumbed the tab on the grenade and dropped it through the hole. Neteri dropped his own grenade simultaneously through the hole beside it, then both of them moved on to the next pair of holes and repeated the process.
“Time to get t’e pock out of here,” Poertena said, headed for the door and accelerating steadily. “T’is t’e next best t’ing to teaching t’em bridge!”
The incendiary grenades were ancient technology—a small bursting charge, surrounded by layers of white phosphorus. Simple, but effective.
The burning metal engulfed the interior of the gate, and some of it spread as far as the front rank of the Diaspran infantry. Despite the weight of their rifle fire, they had been unable to keep the fanatic Krath from staying closer to them than Roger had hoped. Unfortunately, in the words of that most ancient of inter-species military aphorisms, “Shit happens,” and so a few of the humans’ allies learned the hard way that the most terrible thing about white phosphorus is that there is no way to extinguish it. You have to get it off, or simply let it burn out. Water doesn’t quench it; it only makes it burn hotter.
Yet what happened to the Diasprans was only very bad; what happened to the Krath was indescribable. The blazing phosphorus raised the temperature in the gate tunnel to over a thousand degrees Kelvin in a bare instant. The dozens of Mardukans who were covered in Poertena’s fish oil never had a chance as it flashed into vapor and flame. The only mercy—if such a noun could possibly be applied to a moment of such transcendent horror—was that death came very swiftly, indeed.
It came less swiftly for the forces gathered around the interior side of the gate as the ravening flames licked outward. Some of those at least fifteen or twenty meters back actually survived.
The flame gouted up through the murderholes, as well, narrowly missing the last Vashin cavalryman as he scrambled down the scaling rope on the outer wall. The inside of the gate tower was like a chimney, channeling the explosion of heat and fury that set fire to all the woodwork and oil-drenched barrels in the tower’s interior. Force fed from the conflagration underneath, which now included burning bodies, the flame and heat swept through the upper sections of the tower as if it were a blast furnace.
In seconds, the entire gatehouse was fully involved.
“Cut it out, yo
u stupid beast!”
Roger jerked on the reins of his civan as it stamped nervously. He understood why the flames and the smell of burning flesh made all of the cavalry mounts uneasy, but understanding didn’t make his own mount any easier to control, and he felt a sudden longing for Patty.
For virtually the entire march across the far continent, his primary mount had been a flar-ta pack beast—an elephant-sized monstrosity that resembled nothing so much as an omnivorous triceratops. His particular mount had had more than a touch of the much more dangerous wild strain that the Marines had taken to calling “capetoads.” Patty had been five tons of ravening, unstoppable mean in a fight, and at times like this, when it looked like a hard slog all the way to the mountains and possible battles with barbarian tribes beyond, he missed her badly.
But there’d been No Way to fit a flar-ta onto a schooner, so for the time being, he’d just have to put up with these damned two-legged idiots, instead.
Pahner walked over and glanced up at the prince as Roger attempted to soothe the nervous civan.
“I think your plan worked, Your Highness.”
“Better than I’d hoped, actually,” Roger admitted, listening to the steady roar of the flames consuming the gate tower’s interior. “They’ll have to wait for it to cool before they can pursue us on this side of the river. Either that, or climb down the walls.”
“But they’ll have sent out runners on the far side,” Pahner pointed out, gesturing across the barely glimpsed river. “You know there’s a bridge upstream somewhere and garrisons are already being turned out.”
“Then I suppose we should get headed out,” Roger said, kneeing the beast around to face north, away from the inferno at the gate. He lowered his helmet visor and tightened his gauntlets.
“Time to show these religious gentlemen why you don’t pock with House MacClintock.”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
“You are an absolute idiot, Sor Teb,” Lorak Tral snarled.
The general fingered his sword as he glared at the Scourge while smoke from the fires wafted even into the small interior meeting room. It hadn’t taken long for the fire from the gate to spread throughout the upper temple district, especially with oil- and fire-covered soldiers running screaming in every direction. A brief, fortuitous deluge had helped control the worst of the flames, but the damage was extensive. And that didn’t even count the damage to the gatehouse itself . . . or the loss of the High Priest. The jockeying for that position always led to social unrest, and in the wake of the chaos left by the retreating humans, the city balanced precariously on the brink of civil war.
“You may not speak to me that way, Lorak,” the Scourge’s reply made an insult of the naked name. “Whatever has happened, I am still the Scourge of God. I am the Chooser. Beware who you call an idiot.”
“I’ll call you anything I want, you idiot,” the general told him in a voice of ice. “You may be the Scourge, but until this is settled, you are to refrain from any further action. Is that perfectly clear?”
“And who made you High Priest?” Teb snapped. He refused to show it, but a tiny trickle of fear had crept into his heart. Lorak was normally a rather self-effacing type; there must have been notable changes in the last hour or so for him to take this high a hand.
“He is not the High Priest,” Werd Ras said quietly. The Flail, the head of the internal police, had kept out of most of the maneuvering for the succession, but he had eyes and ears everywhere.
“However,” Ras continued, “a quorum of the full council has determined that he will have plenipotentiary authority to deal with this situation. And he is specifically ordered to bring the humans to ground. The council was . . . not impressed by your actions, Sor Teb. Endangering the Voice was idiotic. Doing so with too few guards simply compounded your idiocy. And deserting him when it was clear your plan had failed was inexcusable.”
“You’re going to try to stop the humans with your Sere vern?” Teb said to Lorak scornfully. “All you know is how to make pretty formations. The humans are headed for the Shin. They had one with them, disguised as a Shadem female. You do know what that means, don’t you?”
“You make too much of the Shin,” the general replied with equal scorn. “It is high time to teach those barbarians a lesson.”
Teb’s eyes widened.
“You are joking, right?” He turned to Werd Ras. “Tell me he’s joking.”
“The fact that there was a Shin in the group that killed the Voice was reported to us. In fact, there are some indications that it was the Shin who actually did the deed. Be that as it may, if the Shin aid the humans, they will be pursued to destruction. Messages have been forwarded to Queicuf and Thirlot and will be passed to the Shin. If the Vales aid the humans, they will be put to the torch, and all of them will be taken as Servants.”
“So now you’re Choosing, as well,” Sor Teb said with a gesture of humor. “I suppose the Shin are just going to take this lying down?”
“I don’t care how they take it,” Lorak said. “It is high time that those barbarians learned who their masters are.”
“‘Masters,’” Sor Teb repeated thoughtfully. “‘Masters.’ You know that the last three times Kirsti tried to mount punitive expeditions against the Shin, they were cut off and slaughtered.”
“That’s because none of them insured their line of supply,” Lorak replied with a gesture of contempt. “We’ll set up Thirlot and Queicuf as fortified supply depots and maintain heavily guarded convoys into the mountains. Like the Scourge, the only thing the Shin know is raid and ambush. They won’t be able to cut that line of supply, because—like your precious Scourge—they don’t even know what ‘line of supply’ means.”
“Ah, yes, that’s us,” Teb said, tossing a false-hand in a gesture of mock agreement. “Not much more than barbarians ourselves. Just one last question; you say you informed Queicuf and Thirlot. Does that mean you’re just going to let them scurry all the way to the hills before you go after them?”
“It’s impossible to mount a prepared assault in the time it will take them to travel that far,” Werd said. “And what’s happened here today is sufficient proof that a prepared assault will be necessary to overcome the humans alone, far less crush the Shin, if they should be stupid enough to offer them aid. So, yes, we’re going to let them ‘scurry to the hills.’ If the garrison in Thirlot or Queicuf is able to stop them, all the better. If not, we’ll inform the Shin that they can turn the humans over to us or face the consequences.”
Sor Teb fingered his horns for a moment. He hadn’t come from within the social hierarchy like Werd or Lorak. He’d gotten his start as a junior Scourge raider, and he knew the true fire of the mountain tribes far better than this idiot, who’d only seen Shin after they had been “gentled” by the Scourge. The plan might even work, because the Sere had a point about the Shin’s inability to organize a large action. But as for the tribes’ simply rolling over and baring their bellies . . . that was about as likely as the mountains suddenly going flat.
“I see,” was all he said. “It’s apparent I don’t have anything to do here. I’ll go to my quarters and remain there until summoned.”
“We’ll need a few of your personnel for guides,” Werd Ras said. “You’ll be sent the list of requirements. With the exception of that group, you are to keep your forces in barracks. Any movement on their part will be considered hostile by the council, and will be met with all due force.”
Teb considered that for a moment, then shrugged. “Very well. Am I free to go?”
“For now,” Lorak replied. “For now.”
Roger slid off the civan and slapped its muzzle as it turned to take a bite out of him.
“Cut that out, you son-of-a-bitch, or I’ll shoot you for dinner!”
Pahner shook his head at the prince’s mount while the rest of their caravan continued steadily past them.
“I never did like having to worry about whether or not my transport was going to try to take c
hunks out of me,” he observed. “I think I’ll just go on walking, thank you very much.”
“No decent way to keep up on foot. You’re pretty much stuck to one part of the caravan if all you have is your own feet,” the prince opined. He glanced at the pack ambulances swaying by, and his face tightened. “Any word on Cord?”
“I don’t know, but I do know that it’s time to pick his benan’s brain,” the Marine replied.
“Agreed.” Roger strode over to his asi’s stretcher and shook his head. The contraption was swung between two turom and had to be incredibly uncomfortable, even for someone who was unwounded, he thought, just as Doc Dobrescu appeared out of the column as if summoned by magic.
“How are you doing, Your Highness?”
“Fine, I suppose. Taking my cod liver oil, and all that. How are the casualties?”
“Most of them are either gone, or out of the woods, Your Highness,” Dobrescu admitted. “St. John—Mark, that is—lost his right arm this time. An arquebus round, I think. He lost the left in Voitan, of course, just like the sergeant major. This one was low on the forearm, more lost his hand, really, and it should grow back fairly quickly. He’ll be fully functional in a month or so. And we had one of the wounded Vashin expire—general systemic failure, I think.”
“And Cord?” Roger asked, gesturing at the asi. Pedi was walking beside his stretcher, straight backed and stony faced. She looked the very dictionary image of the stoic tribesman, totally disinterested in asking quarter for herself or anyone else, yet she glanced occasionally at the shaman.
“Tough to tell,” the medic admitted. “He took a solid hit, and the surgery was very rough and ready. Then there’s the dosage on the anesthetic, and any secondary effects it might have, like increased bleeding. He’s a tough old bird, but the emphasis on that could be on ‘old.’ If you know what I mean.”