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The Tale of Krispos

Page 71

by Harry Turtledove

“Can Harvas’ magic have reached into our camp? May Phos prevent it!” Krispos drew the sun-circle over his heart.

  So did Bagradas. “Truly I hope not, Your Majesty. I am inclined to say not, for the sentry who guarded Rhisoulphos’ tent was found unconscious this morning by his relief. Magic might have dealt with the general, but would it have needed to lay low his guard as well? That seems more like the work of ordinary men.”

  “You reason like a priest explaining Phos’ holy scriptures,” Krispos said. A broad, pleased grin spread across Bagradas’ face. Krispos went on, “Take me to this sentry.”

  Bagradas led him through the crowd. The officer’s rank and shouts were not enough to clear a path. But when Krispos raised his voice, men stumbled backward out of the way. Bagradas said, “Your Majesty, this is the file closer Nogeto, who had the late-night duty outside the eminent Rhisoulphos’ tent.”

  Nogeto drew himself to stiff, indeed trembling, attention. “Tell me what happened to you last night, soldier,” Krispos said.

  “Majesty, begging your pardon, but everybody’s been asking me that, and may the ice take me if I know what happened to me. One minute I was standing here not thinking real hard, the way you do when it’s late and you know nothing’s going to go wrong. Only it did. Next thing I knew I was lying on the ground with my relief shaking me awake. And his eminence the general was gone.”

  “Did somebody sap you?”

  “No, Majesty.” Nogeto emphatically shook his head. “I’ve been sapped before, and I know what it’s like. I don’t feel like I’m fixing to die now, the way I would be. I just feel like I went to sleep and then got woke up. Only I couldn’t have. By the good god, I didn’t.” The guard’s eyes widened with fear. Sentries who fell asleep at their posts earned the sword and the chopping block.

  “He’s always been a good soldier, Your Majesty,” Bagradas put in. “He’d not have been chosen to guard the general’s tent if he weren’t.”

  “Is there any reason to think you didn’t just fall asleep when you were, ah, not thinking real hard, soldier?” Krispos asked sternly.

  Nogeto said, “Majesty, for whatever you think it’s worth, just before I—” He changed tack. “Just before whatever happened happened, I mean, I thought I felt—oh, I don’t know; I thought I felt a cobweb blow across my face. I thought I’d picked up my hand to brush it away, but—oh, I don’t know.”

  Krispos glanced at Bagradas. “He’s not making it up as he stands here, Your Majesty,” the officer said. “He said as much before you came.”

  “Will you let a wizard examine you to learn if you speak truly?” Krispos asked Nogeto. The sentry nodded without hesitation. Krispos told Bagradas, “Take him to Trokoundos. If he’s not lying”—Krispos pursed his lips, made a wry face—“well, we’ll just have to look in some other direction, that’s all.”

  “Aye, Your Majesty. Who could have done such a vicious, evil deed?”

  “Maybe Nogeto will be able to give us a clue once Trokoundos works on him,” Krispos said. “Meanwhile, we have to go on as best we can. Excellent Bagradas, do you feel you can lead this regiment until Rhisoulphos turns up again, whenever that may be?”

  “Me, Your Majesty? Oh, you’re far too generous.” Bagradas realized he might have affected too much humility, for he quickly added, “If you feel I can handle the command, I am honored to accept.”

  “I’m sure you’ll lead bravely, excellent Bagradas. Good; I’m glad that much is settled, then.” Krispos turned to go, then stopped, as with an afterthought. “Bagradas, you know my father-in-law and I worked closely together. He was helping to manage some rather delicate business for me in the city. Now that he’s disappeared, I’ll have to deal with it myself. Can you make sure any letters he gets are sent straight on to me before they’re unsealed?”

  “I’ll see to it, Your Majesty,” Bagradas promised. He spun on his heel and set hands on hips as he glared at the gaggle of men still milling around Rhisoulphos’ tent. “Come on, come on, you lugs!” he shouted. “We still have to ride today, whether the eminent sir is here or not. Get cracking, if you please!”

  The men moved smartly to obey. Krispos nodded to himself; Rhisoulphos had been a canny soldier, but the regiment would not suffer under its new leader.

  The army moved out a few minutes later than it might have, but not enough to upset even the veteran underofficers who were responsible for keeping their units in good order. Krispos rode Progress up and down the long line of march. Wherever he went, the troopers were buzzing about Rhisoulphos’ disappearance. Some thought Bagradas had got rid of his commander; others blamed sorcery; others, not surprisingly, were lewd. “He’ll be back in a couple of days, all sleepy and with his breeches unbuttoned,” one fellow guessed.

  “Oh, go on, Dertallos, you’ve just saying what you’d do in his sandals,” a mate replied.

  “If I were in his sandals right now, I wouldn’t be wearing sandals, if you know what I mean,” Dertallos said. Half a dozen voices barked deep male laughter.

  One slow mile followed another. Halfway through the day, Krispos reported that Nogeto had been telling the truth. “He was drugged somehow, poor sod,” the wizard said.

  “How very strange,” Krispos answered. “All right, then; let him return to duty.”

  Scouts rode well in advance of the main imperial army. With them rode wizards, not the journeymen who had accompanied Krispos’ last northern foray but masters for the Sorcerers’ Collegium. If they could not sniff out a trap, no one could. If no one could, Krispos was uneasily aware, that trap would close on his army. And who then would defend Videssos the city, his wife, his heir, and his son to be? No one. He knew that all too well.

  The farther north the army traveled, the fewer the farms Krispos saw being worked. That tore at him. Next to harvesttime, spring should have been the busiest season of the year, with men and oxen in the fields plowing, planting, and watering. But what was the point, when raiders might sweep down at any moment? Many little farming villages stood deserted, their former inhabitants fled to ground they hoped safer. If somehow he beat Harvas, Krispos knew he would have to import peasants to replace the ones who had run away or been slain. Otherwise the whole land would start to go back to wilderness.

  As the Paristrian Mountains climbed higher into the northern sky, men began to peer suspiciously at every clump of brush, every stand of elms they passed. Krispos had known that same feeling the summer before as he approached Imbros: wondering how and where Harvas would strike. Now that he neared Imbros again, he knew it again, doubly strong.

  About two days south of the murdered city, a scout came galloping back to Krispos. The fellow saluted and said, “Majesty, one of the wizards thinks he senses something up ahead. He can’t tell what, he’s not even sure it’s there, but—maybe something.” The scout looked irked at having to report what likely was just a mage’s vagary.

  The most Krispos hoped for, though, was detecting Harvas’ snares at all. Expecting them to announce themselves with bells and whistles was too much to ask. He turned to the army musicians. “Play Form line of battle, then Hold in place. We’ll see what’s gong on up ahead.” As the music rang out and the soldiers began to move, Krispos reflected that he’d be wasting a good part of a day’s travel if the wizard had discovered nothing more than his overactive imagination. But better that than ignoring a true warning and throwing away his army.

  He touched Progress’ flanks with his heels, urging the horse forward. Soon he had pressed ahead of the main body of soldiery. A few other riders advanced with him—wizards all. They knew what a halt had to mean. Trokoundos waved from atop a gray that trotted with a dancer’s grace. Krispos waved back.

  He reined Progress in close behind a knot of scouts and sorcerers. To his untrained senses, the country ahead looked no different from that through which the army had been traveling: fields—too many of them untended—punctuated by stands of oak, maple, elm, and fir. Shadows raced over them, keeping time with the fluffy
clouds that drifted across the sky. It all seemed too lovely, too peaceful, to have anything to do with Harvas.

  “What’s wrong?” Krispos asked.

  One of the sorcerers, a young, gangly man whose thin beard imperfectly covered his acne scars, bowed and said, “Your Majesty, I’m called Zaidas. I feel—not a wrongness ahead, nor even a lack of rightness, but rather—oh, how best to say it?—an absence of both rightness and wrongness, which could be unusual.” He cracked his knuckles and peered nervously at the innocent-appearing countryside.

  “If you don’t sense anything, who knows what’s hiding there? Is that what you’re saying?” Krispos asked. Zaidas nodded. Krispos turned to the other mages. “Do you also feel this, ah, absence?”

  “No, Majesty,” one of them said. “That does not mean it is not there, though. Despite his youth, Zaidas has great and unusual sensitivity, which is the reason we bade him accompany us. What he perceives, or fails to perceive, may well be genuine.” Zaidas’ larynx bobbed up and down as he shot his colleague a grateful glance.

  Krispos made a sour face. “‘May well be’ cuts no ice, sorcerous sirs. I could starve, hunting a grouse that may well be there. How do we find out?”

  Trokoundos strolled up just then to join the discussion. “We find out by testing. Is it not so, brothers?” The other wizards nodded. Trokoundos went on, “The lord with the great and good mind willing, we may even surprise Harvas, who should be confident we’ve noticed nothing.”

  Trokoundos was an able mage, but no general. “If he’s there, he’ll know we’ve noticed,” Krispos said. “We don’t form line of battle every time a rabbit hops across the road. What we have to find out is, what is our line of battle moving toward?”

  “You’re right, of course, Your Majesty.” Trokoundos shook his head in chagrin, then began a technical discussion with the rest of the wizards that lost Krispos by the fourth sentence. He was beginning to wonder if they would spend the whole morning chattering at one another when Trokoundos seemed to remember he was there. The mage said, “Your Majesty, a number of spells could create the illusion of normality ahead. We think one is more likely, given that Harvas could both pervert and amplify its power through blood sacrifice. We will try to break through it now, assuming it to be the one we guess.”

  “Do it,” Krispos said at once. Acting against Harvas instead of reacting to him felt like a victory in itself.

  The wizards went to work with the practiced efficiency of a squad of soldiers who had fought side by side for years. Krispos watched Trokoundos, who smeared his eyelids with an ointment another mage ceremoniously handed him. “The gall of a cat mixed with the fat of an all-white hen,” Trokoundos explained. “It gives the power to see that which others may not.”

  He held up a pale-green stone and a goldpiece, touched the two of them together. “Chrysolite and gold drive away foolishness and expel fantasies, the good god willing.” Behind him, the voice of the rest of the wizards rose and fell as some invoked Phos while others chanted to bring their building spell to sharper focus.

  A wizard threw a gray-green leaf on a brazier; the puff of smoke that arose smelled sweet. Trokoundos set a small, sparkling stone in a copper bowl, smashed it to fragments with a silver hammer. “Opal and laurel, when used with the proper spell, may render a man—or, with sufficient strength, maybe, an army—invisible. Thus we destroy both, and thus we destroy with spell.” With the last words Trokoundos’ voice rose to a shout. His right finger stabbed out toward the peaceful-looking landscape ahead.

  For a long moment, for more than a moment, nothing happened. Krispos glared at Zaidas, who was watching the unchanged terrain with the same dejected expression his colleagues bore. Aye, he was very sensitive, Krispos thought—he could even detect traps that weren’t there.

  Then the air rippled, as if it were the surface of a rough-running stream. Krispos blinked and rubbed at his eyes. Trokoundos raised a fist and shouted in triumph. Zaidas looked like a man reprieved when the sword was already on its way up. And while the landscape to the north did not change, when the ripples cleared they revealed a great army of foot soldiers drawn up in battle array across the road, across the fields, one end of their line anchored by a pond, the other by a grove of apple trees. They could not have been more than a mile away.

  Horns cried out behind Krispos. Drums thumped. Pipes squealed. His men shouted. They saw the enemy, too, then. He gave the wizards a formal military salute. “Thank you, magical sirs. Without you, we would have blundered straight into them.”

  Just then Harvas’ men must have realized they were discovered. They shouted, too, not with the disciplined hurrah of Videssian troops but loud and long and fierce, like so many bloodthirsty wild beasts. The sun sparked cheerfully off axe blades, helms, and mail coats as they surged toward the imperial army.

  Krispos turned to the wizards once more. “Magical sirs, if it’s to be battle, I suggest you get clear before you’re caught in the middle.” That possibility did not seem to have occurred to some of the sorcerers. They scrambled onto horses and mules and rode off with remarkable celerity. Krispos rode away, too, back to where the imperial standard snapped in the breeze at the center of the imperial line.

  Mammianos greeted him with a salute and a wry grin. “Worried for a minute there that I’d have to run this battle without you,” the fat general grunted.

  “Nice to know you think I’m of some use,” Krispos answered.

  Mammianos grunted again. His grin got wider. He said, “Aye, you’re of some use, Your Majesty. Fair gave me a turn, it did, when those buggers appeared out of thin air. If we’d just walked on into them, well, it could have ruined our whole day.”

  “That’s one way to put it, yes.” Krispos grinned, too, at Mammianos’ sangfroid. He ran an eye up and down the Videssian line. It was as he and his marshals had planned, with lancers—some mounted on horses wearing mail of their own—in the front ranks on either wing and archers behind them, ready to shoot over their heads into the ranks of the enemy. In the center stood the Halogai of the imperial guard.

  The guardsmen did not know it, but native units on either side had orders to turn on them if they went over to Harvas. That might suffice to keep the imperial army alive. Krispos knew it would not save him. He drew his saber and scowled at the advancing enemy.

  Mammianos spoke to the musicians. New calls rang through the air. The horsemen on either wing slid forward, seeking to envelop Harvas’ front. Krispos scowled again, this time when he noticed how broad that front was. “He has more men than we’d reckoned,” he said to Mammianos.

  “Aye, so he does,” the general agreed glumly. “The northerners must have been streaming south from Halogaland ever since Harvas seized Kubrat. To them the land and climate look good.”

  “True, true.” Krispos had entertained the same thought himself. He’d spent several years north of the Paristrian Mountains after Kubrati raiders kidnapped everyone in his village. He remembered Kubrat as bleak and cold. If Halogai found it attractive, he shivered to think what that said of their homeland.

  Then he stopped worrying about Halogaland and started worrying about the Halogai in front of him. Harvas’ men fought with the same disregard for life and limb—their own or their foes’—as did the northerners who served Videssos. They shouted their evil chieftain’s name as they swung their axes in sweeping arcs of death.

  The imperials shouted, too. The cry Krispos heard most often was a cry for revenge: “Imbros!” The lines crashed together in bloody collision. After moments of that fight, even men previously uninitiated into the red brotherhood of war could honestly call themselves veterans. A little fighting against the northerners went a long way.

  Here a lancer spitted a Haloga, as if to roast him over some huge fire. There another Haloga crashed to the ground, his armor clattering about him, as a cleverly aimed arrow found the gap between shield top and helm. But Harvas’ men dealt out deadly wounds as well as suffering them. Here an axeman hewed down
first horse and then rider, splashing friend and foe alike with gore. There yet another northerner, already bleeding from a dozen wounds, pulled a Videssian from the saddle and stabbed him before falling in death.

  In front of Krispos, the combat was foot soldier against foot soldier, Haloga against Haloga, as the warriors who followed Harvas met those who had given their allegiance to the Avtokrator of the Videssians. As in any battle where brother met brother, that was the fiercest fight of all, a war within the greater war. The Halogai swung and struck and swung again, all the while cursing one another for having chosen the wrong side. Once hatred was too hot even for weapons, as two Halogai who had been screaming abuse as they fought threw aside axes and shields to batter each other with fists.

  The northerners who had taken Videssos’ gold never wavered; Krispos knew shame for having doubted them. All because they’d sworn they would, they battled and bled and died for a land that was not theirs, with a courage few of its native sons could match.

  “How do we fare?” Krispos shouted to Mammianos.

  “We’re holding them,” the general shouted back. “From all I can tell, that’s better than Agapetos or Mavros—Phos keep them in his light—ever managed to do. If the wizards can keep Harvas from buggering us while we’re looking the other way, we may end up celebrating the day instead of cursing it.”

  Most of the wizards, by now, clustered behind the imperial line, not far from where Krispos sat atop Progress. They gathered in a tight knot around Zaidas; if any of their number could sense Harvas Black-Robe’s next move, the young mage was probably the one. Krispos hoped his skinny shoulders could carry that weight of responsibility.

  Even as the thought crossed Krispos’ mind, Zaidas jerked where he stood. He spoke rapidly to his comrades, who burst into action. Krispos noted what they did less closely than he might have, for at that same moment he was afflicted by a deep and venomous itch. Put any man in armor and he will itch—sweat will dry on his skin, and he cannot scratch. Rather than go mad, he learns to ignore it. Krispos could not ignore this itch; it was as if cockroaches scrambled over the very core of him. Of themselves, his fingertips scraped against his gilded shirt of mail.

 

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