Upon reflection,
after we beat back a relief sortie by troops from Taglios, the
commander of the fortress offered to surrender on terms. He wanted
paroles for himself and damned near everyone who ever bore arms in
the three nearest counties. Which was not all that unreasonable, I
thought, considering we were going to turn all this over to the
Prahbrindrah Drah as soon as the deal closed and the Prince could
get his ass up here from Ghoja.
Even after all her years in the real world Sleepy retained some
Vehdna notions about right and wrong that had nothing to do with
the practicalities of the moment.
“Even if this Lal Mindrat is the worst human monster since
the Shadowmasters themselves, you have to consider what your moral
rigidity can cost the rest of us,” I told Sleepy. Evidently
Lal Mindrat had betrayed some of our allies during the Kiaulune
wars. I had not heard of him before Sleepy started getting uppity
so it could not have been a major betrayal.
A good many friends of the Company had been turned by the
Protector in those days. Soulcatcher had had the power and
wealth.
“Be flexible,” I advised. “But treacherous
when absolutely necessary.”
She understood. With some half-ass help from Tobo and his
friends, and the appropriate promises of parole and safe passage,
Sleepy got our enemies to evacuate the stronghold with no more
violence than occurred when Lal Mindrat came out with his
lifeguard.
Thus the Captain finished her business with a minor traitor from
her own era. For the time being.
Mogaba made our approach hell, at least for those of us who
pulled the recon, picket and vanguard duties. Horsemen never
stopped harassing our forward elements. The Voroshk girls and I
went out whenever the enemy’s behavior became overly
obnoxious.
Eventually we reached the great South Gate of Taglios, something
that had not existed in my time. These days a truly substantial
wall stretched into the distance at either hand. The soldiers on
the ramparts seemed much too small. The wall reared up like a vast
cliff of limestone.
“Wow!” I told Sleepy. ’There’s been some
changes made.” The entrance to the city was a fortress in
itself, outside the wall but attached to it. I could not tell from
the ground for sure but it looked like an equally formidable
structure guarded the pass-through from within.
Sleepy grunted. “Been a few since I was here. Methinks the
Great General must have inveigled some appropriations out of the
Protector somehow. They’ve added several feet to the height
of the wall. And that barbican
complex . . . ” She shrugged.
As I remembered city politics, public works were particularly
vulnerable to graft and corrupt practices. “Somebody in the
treasury offices must have been blowing in the Protector’s
ear.”
Sleepy grunted again, uninterested in my opinion. She was
watching Suvrin spread the troops out facing the city, offering
battle. No response was expected. No response was what he got.
I said, “They don’t have to be careful of
anybody’s property, at least.” More than the immensity
of the wall itself, I was awed by the existence of a
thousand-foot-wide band of empty ground lapping the wall’s
foot. What had it taken to get people moved off that ground? How
did the state keep them off?
“In a few months there’ll be grainfields and
vegetable patches as far as you can see. That grid of pathways
marks the boundaries of the patches. They started that back right
after Sahra and I first came to the city.”
“Tobo’s going to be a busy boy.”
Sleepy examined our forces, left and right. They did not appear
threatening against the backdrop of the wall. Nor did anyone atop
that wall appear concerned.
“He will. I expect him and the girls to hit hard, with
everything they have, right from the start, so people in there will
be stunned by the fury of it. Is he going to be able to do
it?”
“I can’t guarantee you his heart’ll be in
it.”
“What about you? Is your heart going to be in
it?”
I heaved a huge sigh.
Sleepy asked, “How is she doing?”
Another major sigh. “Honestly? I’m worried. She just
lays there, midway between life and death. She gets no better; she
gets no worse. I’m starting to wonder how much the Kina
connection has to do with all that.”
It took a major effort to let that out. Because of what the
Captain might consider if she grasped all the implications. And she
began to see some right away.
I said, “If I can pull Tobo through his grief he may be
able to find out if Kina’s gained any control.” I
dreaded the possibility that the Dark Mother was setting my wife up
as an alternate route of escape from her ancient prison. I could
imagine a scenario wherein I struck the sleeping Goddess and freed
Shivetya only to see the darkness return through the woman I
love.
Not that it would take the Mother of Night to accomplish that.
She was entirely willing to welcome in her own breed of
darkness.
Aren’t we all.
The Captain said, “I haven’t heard a direct answer.
Can I count on you to actually pay attention when the arrows start
to fly?”
An old, old formula came to mind, from back when I was very
young indeed. “I am a soldier.” I said it first in the
language I had spoken then, then repeated myself in Sleepy’s
own Dejagoran dialect. “I’ve been distracted before.
I’m still alive.”
“Yeah, soldiers live. You only get one mistake,
Croaker.”
“Go teach your granny to suck eggs.” Which was a
waste of colorful language. The expression had no meaning amongst
these peoples.
“What’s that?” Sleepy asked, pointing at
something rising above the city.
“Looks like a big-ass kite.”
Upon reflection,
after we beat back a relief sortie by troops from Taglios, the
commander of the fortress offered to surrender on terms. He wanted
paroles for himself and damned near everyone who ever bore arms in
the three nearest counties. Which was not all that unreasonable, I
thought, considering we were going to turn all this over to the
Prahbrindrah Drah as soon as the deal closed and the Prince could
get his ass up here from Ghoja.
Even after all her years in the real world Sleepy retained some
Vehdna notions about right and wrong that had nothing to do with
the practicalities of the moment.
“Even if this Lal Mindrat is the worst human monster since
the Shadowmasters themselves, you have to consider what your moral
rigidity can cost the rest of us,” I told Sleepy. Evidently
Lal Mindrat had betrayed some of our allies during the Kiaulune
wars. I had not heard of him before Sleepy started getting uppity
so it could not have been a major betrayal.
A good many friends of the Company had been turned by the
Protector in those days. Soulcatcher had had the power and
wealth.
“Be flexible,” I advised. “But treacherous
when absolutely necessary.”
She understood. With some half-ass help from Tobo and his
friends, and the appropriate promises of parole and safe passage,
Sleepy got our enemies to evacuate the stronghold with no more
violence than occurred when Lal Mindrat came out with his
lifeguard.
Thus the Captain finished her business with a minor traitor from
her own era. For the time being.
Mogaba made our approach hell, at least for those of us who
pulled the recon, picket and vanguard duties. Horsemen never
stopped harassing our forward elements. The Voroshk girls and I
went out whenever the enemy’s behavior became overly
obnoxious.
Eventually we reached the great South Gate of Taglios, something
that had not existed in my time. These days a truly substantial
wall stretched into the distance at either hand. The soldiers on
the ramparts seemed much too small. The wall reared up like a vast
cliff of limestone.
“Wow!” I told Sleepy. ’There’s been some
changes made.” The entrance to the city was a fortress in
itself, outside the wall but attached to it. I could not tell from
the ground for sure but it looked like an equally formidable
structure guarded the pass-through from within.
Sleepy grunted. “Been a few since I was here. Methinks the
Great General must have inveigled some appropriations out of the
Protector somehow. They’ve added several feet to the height
of the wall. And that barbican
complex . . . ” She shrugged.
As I remembered city politics, public works were particularly
vulnerable to graft and corrupt practices. “Somebody in the
treasury offices must have been blowing in the Protector’s
ear.”
Sleepy grunted again, uninterested in my opinion. She was
watching Suvrin spread the troops out facing the city, offering
battle. No response was expected. No response was what he got.
I said, “They don’t have to be careful of
anybody’s property, at least.” More than the immensity
of the wall itself, I was awed by the existence of a
thousand-foot-wide band of empty ground lapping the wall’s
foot. What had it taken to get people moved off that ground? How
did the state keep them off?
“In a few months there’ll be grainfields and
vegetable patches as far as you can see. That grid of pathways
marks the boundaries of the patches. They started that back right
after Sahra and I first came to the city.”
“Tobo’s going to be a busy boy.”
Sleepy examined our forces, left and right. They did not appear
threatening against the backdrop of the wall. Nor did anyone atop
that wall appear concerned.
“He will. I expect him and the girls to hit hard, with
everything they have, right from the start, so people in there will
be stunned by the fury of it. Is he going to be able to do
it?”
“I can’t guarantee you his heart’ll be in
it.”
“What about you? Is your heart going to be in
it?”
I heaved a huge sigh.
Sleepy asked, “How is she doing?”
Another major sigh. “Honestly? I’m worried. She just
lays there, midway between life and death. She gets no better; she
gets no worse. I’m starting to wonder how much the Kina
connection has to do with all that.”
It took a major effort to let that out. Because of what the
Captain might consider if she grasped all the implications. And she
began to see some right away.
I said, “If I can pull Tobo through his grief he may be
able to find out if Kina’s gained any control.” I
dreaded the possibility that the Dark Mother was setting my wife up
as an alternate route of escape from her ancient prison. I could
imagine a scenario wherein I struck the sleeping Goddess and freed
Shivetya only to see the darkness return through the woman I
love.
Not that it would take the Mother of Night to accomplish that.
She was entirely willing to welcome in her own breed of
darkness.
Aren’t we all.
The Captain said, “I haven’t heard a direct answer.
Can I count on you to actually pay attention when the arrows start
to fly?”
An old, old formula came to mind, from back when I was very
young indeed. “I am a soldier.” I said it first in the
language I had spoken then, then repeated myself in Sleepy’s
own Dejagoran dialect. “I’ve been distracted before.
I’m still alive.”
“Yeah, soldiers live. You only get one mistake,
Croaker.”
“Go teach your granny to suck eggs.” Which was a
waste of colorful language. The expression had no meaning amongst
these peoples.
“What’s that?” Sleepy asked, pointing at
something rising above the city.
“Looks like a big-ass kite.”