Dinnalsyn neck-reined his dog around. The guns were vanishing into the night, and small-arms fire crackled from the ramparts above. Alone but for his aides and messengers, he saluted the walls.
“Here’s to you, heneralissimo,” he said. “I don’t know how the hell you manage it, but it’s never dull. Waymanos!”
He clapped heels to his dog.
Corporal M’Telgez was acutely conscious of Messer Raj standing quietly behind him as the artillery bellowed. It was blacker than a meter up a sauroid’s butt here on the wall’s fighting platform; and it smelled of old death, rotting blood and bits of bodies. He willed himself to ignore the smell, and the feeling of confinement—he was a dog-and-saddle man, not a mole or a town-dweller—and the far more nerve-wracking presence of the heneralissimo. Not that he was one to interfere with a man doing his work, far from it. It was just a little disconcerting to have Messer Raj and the Colonel and the Captain all pick your spot to pause when the balloon went up. There was a gap in the gabions he’d picked earlier for his first aiming point. Invisible in the darkness now, but pretty soon—
“Fwego!”
The stubby mortars on the towers chugged. Starshells burst over the wog entrenchments, throwing a flickering blue-white magnesium light. He exhaled and squeezed the trigger. Crack. His rifle punched his shoulder. He worked the lever and reached for one of the rounds in the wooden holder beside his hand. Crack. A Colonial gun fired from the forward trenches. He adjusted his sights and aimed for it, with any luck a round might ricochet off the barrel and into one of the crew. Crack. Crack. Crack.
“Cease fire! Rearward, on the double!” he called out.
His squad was closest to the staircase. They double-timed down it, through the hot dark and the faint reflected light of the starshells, while the field guns blazed away to their right. Eyes and teeth glimmered from the dogs crouching in neat rows in the open space within the walls; they were too well trained to move when they’d been told to stay, but the noise made them eager and uneasy. They rose with a surge as their riders straddled them. M’Telgez’s feet found the stirrups, and he slid his rifle into the scabbard, taking the reins in tightly with his left hand. More and more men poured down the stairways by the gates, until the whole battalion was mounted.
No trumpet calls, but the men fell in—every dog knew its place by smell, if nothing else. M’Telgez saw the shadowy length of the battalion standard go by, and an arm flash up. He tapped his heel to Pochita’s flank, and the whole column broke into a fast walk that turned into a slow loping trot. They moved south of the last of the guns, under the arc of the last shells, then turned eastward toward the docks. The sky ripped above them. M’Telgez felt his shoulders hunch; his hindbrain knew what that meant, only too well.
CRUMP. A heavy shell sledged into the empty space behind him. Seconds later dirt pattered down out of the air. At least they weren’t firing airburst; it must be too difficult with no observation of the fall of shot. CRUMP. CRUMP. CRUMP. The last one fell on a gun that was moving parallel to the column of the 5th Descott, and the limber went up too in a huge ball of red-orange flame. Men screamed and dogs wailed ahead of him. An officer rode out; his pistol cracked as the dogs were put down, and the men swung up behind comrades, no time for first aid now. CRUMP. CRUMP. CRUMP. More shells went by overhead and blasted into the upper stories of empty houses. Adobe brick and fragments of roof tiles and burning planks cataracted into the streets. He kept his head down and followed the man ahead of him, hoping that the officers knew where they were going. Shells were coming overhead in a continuous stream, but a whole city was a big target.
Mother, he thought. This was worse than a battle; then you could do something.
Horace knew he was being ridden toward another boat ride. He turned nose-to-tail and circled. Raj cursed, but he didn’t bother yanking on the reins; you could pull until the levers gouged a hole right through his cheeks, and Horace wouldn’t pay much attention. Instead he let the knotted reins fall on the pommel and leaned forward, thumping the hound’s neck with the flat of his hand.
“Come on, you son of a bitch,” he said firmly. “We’ve got places to go and things to do. Stop this nonsense.”
Horace lowered his ears and head and turned, breaking into a shambling trot. Raj’s banner snapped in the night air; the Colonial shells went by overhead with their mechanical wails, a continuous diminuendo punctuated by the crash of the bursting charges. He pressed with his heels as a barricade of brick and burning rubble closed the way. Horace took it in a single long leap, then checked a pace to let the others come through. Heat slapped at him as they passed over the flame; a dog yelped suddenly as it stepped on a hot ember.
Raj grinned into the darkness. Well, we certainly got their attention, he thought.
all colonial guns are firing at maximum speed, Center noted. even with ample ammunition reserves, this will degrade performance and shorten the life of the barrels.
Raj nodded. Wasteful. The hotter a gun got, the worse the wear on the lands of the rifling. After a while it had to be sent back to the foundry to have a new sleeve fitted into the barrel and rifled, and it was never quite as good after that. The third time it had to be scrapped.
“Want to do the honors, mi heneral?” Jorg Menyez said.
He waved to the lines of slowmatch that snaked away among the warehouses and boatyards of Sandoral’s docks. The raw smell of kerosene and gunpowder was thick in the air.
“Dinnalsyn assures me that it will all go off at about the same time.”
Raj looked around with grim satisfaction. When the warehouses and shipyards went up, it would also take all the remaining timber in Sandoral suitable for boats or rafts or bridging materials. Ali might get the city, but he was damned if there’d be anything immediately useful in it when he did. No food, no building materials.
“I wouldn’t dream of denying you the pleasure, Jorg,” Raj said.
Menyez ceremoniously puffed on his cigarillo and applied the end to the slowmatch. It lit with a sullen hiss and trail of blue smoke.
“And now we bid farewell to beauteous Sandoral: land of exotic giant cockroaches, intolerable sticky heat-rash, and picturesque, hairy wogs with razor-sharp gelding knives,” the infantryman mock-quoted. East Residence had enough of a middle class to support a tourist trade, mostly steamboat excursions to the Bay Islands. Guidebooks were common, too. “Hadios, mi heneral.”
It probably did the men good to see their commanders relaxed and confident. It does me good. Jorg’s usually a worrier. Morale’s probably as high as it should be. Possibly higher than it should be . . . Now who’s worrying?
“Hadios, Jorg. See you downriver.”
He turned Horace. Raft after raft was heading downstream, casting off behind its towing-barge. Sweeps tossed up small chuckling ripples of green water, a faint sheen under the crescent of Miniluna. As each loosed its ties to the anchor cables, another cluster of dogs and guns would trundle out across the linked rafts to the outermost. War-dogs whined as chain staples fastened their bridles to pins in the decking; the wheels of guns and limbers were lashed down, and another raft and barge combination was under way. Beyond the rafts boats speckled the water, sloops and ferries, and score after score of the pontoon barges.
Messengers trotted up, reported, left. Damn. Amazing. Only one traffic jam. And that caused by rubble blocking a street and the battalion assigned to it swerving into another’s route. Paws and feet and wheels filled the night with a low rumble of purposeful noise, none of it as loud as the whistle and crash of two hundred Colonial guns bombarding the city. More starshells lightened the sky to the west, Colonial this time, put up so their artillery had better visibility.
“Shall I order a cease-fire?”
“No, Hussein,” Tewfik replied, also in a whisper.
The central roof of the bunker had caved in, but the beams had not given way completely. They sagged to the floor, their jagged breaks splintered, like bone-white teeth. Dry dirt poured down
still, pooling and spreading; soldiers dug bodies out of the pile, some wounded and some dead, and carried them up the stairs. Ripped down and stamped in a pile, the tapestries still smoldered from the burning kerosene that falling lamps had sprayed across them—sprayed across men, as well.
Although not, unfortunately, across my brother, Tewfik thought. It would be a disaster if Ali died just now. It might be salvation if he were struck down by an incapacitating injury; the longer, the better. There is no God but God, and all things are accomplished according to the will of God. But sometimes it was difficult to understand His tactics. He wrinkled his nose at the smell of burning carpets. More waste. The cost of them was enough to pay a brigade of cavalry for a year, and now they would be replaced. Transport would be commandeered to replace them, while the guns ate a month’s reserve of ammunition.
“Amir, we will lose guns soon if we keep up this rate of fire,” the officer warned. “The barrels are so hot we’ll have cook-offs during reloading.”
“Reduce the rate, but not so much that he” —he nodded to the other chamber of the bunker; Ali’s sputtering curses could still be heard there, and occasionally a woman’s scream— “will notice. Better to shoot the lands out of the barrels than have more executions.”
The officer stroked his beard and leaned close. “Amir, it is time to consider if the House of Peace can stand, with this man at the head of it.”
Tewfik stared into the other man’s face for a moment; the brown eyes met his single one unflinching. Good. I have no cowards on my staff.
“He has no sons,” he said quietly. “Nor do I.”
“The Prophet Muhammed had no sons; but many rulers sprang from his daughters.”
“And many wars sprang from the claims of his daughters’ descendants and the orthodox caliphs, beginning with Kharballa,” Tewfik pointed out. That had started a split that echoed down millennia, not even ending with the Last Jihad. “There are also too many nobles with enough of the Settler’s blood to make a fair claim. Ali is no fool, he’s killed the only ones with indisputable claims or great ability, or both. If we have civil war now, the kaphar and the Zanj and the northern savages will race each other to pick our bones. We must continue.”
“For the present.”
“For the present,” Tewfik agreed. Until Ali alive becomes more a menace to the House of Islam than Ali dead, went unspoken between them. “Now go, and have the gunners reduce their rate of fire by one-third. On my authority.”
I control the Host of Peace, but I cannot rule, he knew bitterly. Not in his own name. If only there were a male heir, a regency might be possible—but there was not. The mullahs would not issue the Friday prayer for one-eyed Tewfik; men would not obey, not without a soldier standing behind them. He would shatter what he most wished to preserve, if he tried that.
“Insh’allah.”
The acrid gloom of the bunker was stifling. Left hand on the hilt of his yataghan, he strode up the stairs, past the protective curves and the intermediate guardroom. The blue-white sputtering light of starshells made him slit his eyes at the dark motionless bulk of Sandoral’s low-slung walls. They mocked him from behind the moat, tantalized him. Men and dogs labored to bring the ammunition forward to the siege guns from the bombproofs set behind the main line, along pathways sunk into the ground with protective berms on either side. The gunners toiled, stripped to the waist, their faces and torsos black with powder smoke. Many had balls of cotton wool stuffed in their ears, but they courted deafness as well as death with every shot. It did not stop the smooth choreographed sequence of laying, swabbing, loading, ramming, firing.
A heavy shell bit a section out of the firing parapet in a clap of orange flame and rumble of sound. Water spurted up where the stone fell into the moat, leaving a ragged gap in the concrete core. No fire replied from the city.
“Was that your plan, Whitehall, to weaken our artillery? Did you know how my brother would respond to your taunt?”
The stonk on the command bunker had been wickedly well-placed. Whitehall was well served, good officers, brave and well-trained troops, well equipped. Does he know us well enough to predict that my brother would waste ammunition and guns like this? He nodded. Certainly.
“Yet it cannot affect the outcome of the war,” he mused.
Could it be cover for another raid? Unlikely. With a pontoon bridge for rapid withdrawal and a secure fortified base, Whitehall had still been unable to do more than divert him temporarily. Now the land across the river was unfit to support moving troops. What could the infidel accomplish with the smaller number of men they could smuggle across the river now?
That was the problem. He did not know.
“Lord Amir. The Settler requires your presence.”
Tewfik ground his teeth. He has beaten enough women to feel brave again, he thought. Now he must play at commander. And waste my time!
With an enemy like Whitehall, time was one thing you never had a surplus of. From all reports, Barholm Clerett was almost as difficult a master to serve as Ali ibn’Jamal—but at least he was far away.
The little galley Raj was using as his HQ had been some rich merchant’s toy before war came to Sandoral, or perhaps belonged to a landowner with estates on the riverbank who wanted to be able to commute to his townhouse in the district capital. For a moment Raj wondered where he was, that little provincial oligarch. On the road west, grumbling in his carriage with a nagging wife and the nurse fussing with the children and a train of baggage carts behind? Perhaps already in East Residence, imposing on some distant relative or dickering with a lodging-keeper not at all impressed by anything from beyond the walls of the city. Or caught on his country property by Colonial raiders, and now tumbled bones in a ditch.
We must be making ten klicks per hour, he thought.
a range of 9.7 to 10.1, averaging 9.9 overall, Center said.
Tonight and tomorrow to reach their destination, traveling with the current. The men in the barges and boats were sculling, but more to keep station and direction than for propulsion. There were enough in each vessel to change off at frequent intervals, too.
“Over to Major Bellamy,” Raj said, pointing.
The galley came about sharply, bringing a protesting whine from Horace and Harbie on the foredeck. The crew were all ex-boatmen and used to the shattering labor at the oars; one side dug theirs in hard, the other feathered, and the man at the tiller pushed it over. The slender boat turned in almost its own length and stroked eastward. Beside a raft crowded with troops and dogs it halted; Raj leaned over the side, one hand on the rail.
“There’s your destination, Major,” he said, pointing southward, downstream. “Remember the timing’s crucial.”
Bellamy waved back wordlessly, his bowl-cut blond hair bright in the darkness. His rowers bent to their work, and several of the other barges followed. Raj’s galley curved back toward the main body of the straggling armada, like a sheepdog with its flock.
More like a pack of carnosauroids, Raj thought, watching the dull glint of moonlight on the barrels of the field pieces on a raft.
Suzette came up beside him, a cigarette glowing in its holder of carved sauroid ivory. “The waiting’s the hardest part,” she said.
“No, just the longest,” Raj said. “Having to send others out, that’s hardest.”
She put an arm around his waist and leaned her head on his shoulder.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
“Stake the dogs,” Ludwig Bellamy said.
His second-in-command blinked at him. “It’s more than a kilometer to the objective,” he said in surprise.
“Ni, migo,” Bellamy said in Namerique. “Walking that far won’t kill us.”
He shook his head as the man walked away to spread the order by whisper. Messer Raj had taught his Squadrone followers that fighting on foot was no disgrace, but they’d still rather ride ten kilometers than walk one.
He squinted at his map; an aide lit a match and held it over the paper. Messer Raj
had penciled in the route with his own hands. Yes. That’s the gully. There was a roadway of sorts along the river’s edge, but it was entirely too visible from the other side, back around Sandoral. His scouts gathered around, holding the reins of their dogs.
“Lead the way,” he said, tracing out the branchings of wash and ravine. “It’s only a klick; but keep an eye out for wog pickets.”
He looked up at the bulk of the unit; nearly everyone was ashore from the beached barges and rafts, although many were soaked to the waist. Water squelched in his own high boots. The last few came in sight, holding their rifles and bandoliers over their heads as they waded to the muddy riverbank.
“Fall them in,” he said quietly.
The 1st Mounted Cruisers formed up in ranks four deep, and the rabble of militia gunners behind them. They’d have no part in the immediate action, but they were important if everything worked right.
“Migos, Messer Raj trusts us to do this job right without holding our hands. Let’s show him he’s right. Keep it quiet and move quickly.”
“Right face. At the double, forward march.”
They swung off into the night, rifles at the trail. Bellamy trotted up along the line to the head, where the battalion banner was. His aide was leading his dog, back at the rear; the men would march with a better will if they saw the commander on foot too. Some of them grinned and shook their rifles in the air as he passed.
They’re pumped, Bellamy decided. This had all the earmarks of one of Messer Raj’s sauroid-out-of-the-helmet tricks. They trusted their leader’s luck. And they hated being cooped up inside walls, no matter how strong.
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