following them not far behind on a mule, wearing the clothing of a bandit's woman and clutching a rag-wrapped bandit's child before her. Two other bandit children-wrapped in even filthier rags-rode tandem on a mule alongside hers.
'I'll bet you my retirement bonus against yours that woman can cook anything. She probably laughs while she's chopping onions.'
* * *
By evening, Valentinian was feeling positively cheerful. As it turned out, Lady Sanga apparently
'I was getting
'No one will notice its absence,' she'd claimed. Ajatasutra, despite some misgivings, had not pressed the point. He'd simply insisted that she transfer the supplies-which consisted mostly of onions, packets of herbs and spices and other savories, and a small knife-into various sacks, leaving the empty chest behind to burn in the flames. He agreed with her that no one would notice the absent supplies. But the chest, though not an expensive item likely to be stolen, had solid fittings which would survive the flames. Someone-someone like Nanda Lal and his best spies, at any rate-
'Got onions in't,' Valentinian continued happily. 'I love onions.'
Anastasius sighed heavily. 'I don't miss their cooking, but I do miss the Kushans. I felt better with Kujulo and his maniacs around.'
Ajatasutra began to say something, but Anastasius waved him down. 'Don't bother! I understand the logic, you damned schemer. Five men-two of them injured, and one of them elderly-a woman, and three children can make their way across the Ganges plain without being noticed much. No way a large party of armed men could. Especially not Kushans. Not when we got to Kausambi, for sure.'
Valentinian had finished devouring the savory by then, and Anastasius' last words brought back his normal gloom.
'I still say this plan is insane. We could get Lady Sanga and the children out
Ajatasutra began to speak again, but, again, Anastasius waved him down. 'I'll deal with the little weasel.' Glowering: 'Valentinian, that'd be even more insane. This whole little rescue operation was a side trip added on at the last moment. We
'
The supremacy of logic having been restored, Anastasius went back to his own worries. 'I just miss having the Kushans around. I don't begrudge it to them, mind you, getting back to their own folk. And since they'll pass through the Sind on their way, they can probably give the general word of how we're doing. But-' He sighed, even more heavily than before. 'It's going to be tricky, with just the three of us, if we get attacked by
Lady Sanga and the children had eaten earlier, and she had given the two wounded Rajputs what care she could. So now she and her children were sitting around the campfire listening to the exchange. No sooner had Anastasius finished than Rajiv sprang to his feet, drawing his sword and waving it about.
'Bandits-
The twelve-year-old boy's enthusiasm did not seem to mollify Anastasius. Ajatasutra shared the giant cataphract's skepticism. Having an overconfident and rambunctious lad as an 'additional warrior' struck him as more trouble than help.
And, judging from the fierce scowl on his face, Valentinian felt even more strongly about it. But Valentinian's displeasure, it became immediately apparent, had a more immediate focus.
'You hold a sword that way in a fight, boy, you're a dead man.'
Rajiv lowered the blade, his face a study in contradiction. One the one hand, chagrin. On the other, injured- even outraged-pride.
'My father taught me to hold a sword!' he protested. 'Rana Sanga himself!'
Valentinian shook his head, rose with his usual quick and fluid speed, and drew his own sword. 'He didn't teach you
The cataphract stalked off a few paces onto an empty patch of ground. The sun had set over the horizon, but there was still enough light to see. He turned, and made a come-hither gesture with his sword.
'May as well start tonight, boy. If you're going to be any help against bandits, your swordwork has got to get better.'
Eagerly, Rajiv trotted forward to begin his new course of instruction. Behind him, Lady Sanga shook her head, not so much ruefully as with a certain sense of detached irony.
'There's something peculiar about all this,' she chuckled. 'The son being trained by the father's great enemy. To fight whom in the end, I wonder?'
'God is prone to whimsy,' pronounced Ajatasutra.
'Nonsense,' countered Anastasius. 'The logic seems impeccable to me. Especially when we consider what Aristotle had to say about-'
Chapter 37
The Punjab
Belisarius went across on the first ship, leaving Maurice to stabilize the Roman defensive lines at Uch. He had no intention of trying to hold Uch, beyond the two or three days necessary to transfer the entire army across the Chenab. But keeping an army steady while it is making a fighting withdrawal requires a very firm hand in control, a characterization which fit Maurice perfectly.
Belisarius wanted to get a sense of the land he would be holding as soon as possible, which was why he decided to take the risk of being part of the initial landing. His subordinates had protested that decision, rather vehemently, but Belisarius fit the description of 'very firm' quite well himself.
Besides, he thought the risk was minimal. The small triangle of land formed by the confluence of the Chenab and the Indus was not well situated to defend
'Crammed' was the operative term, however, and Belisarius was thankful that the river crossing took not much more than an hour. By the time his own ship began offloading its soldiers, the second ship the Romans had captured when they took Uch was halfway across the river bearing its own load of troops.
Belisarius landed on the bank of the Chenab just north of Panjnad Head, which marked the confluence of the Chenab and the Sutlej. That position was much too far north for him to hold for long. The Indus was fifteen miles away, and the confluence of the Indus and the Chenab was twenty-five miles to the southwest, forming a triangle well over sixty miles in circumference-more likely eighty or ninety miles, considering all the loops and bends in the