once they start transferring troops from the Ganges valley, we'll be looking at two hundred thousand.' A bit lamely: 'Soon enough.'
'Maurice,' said Belisarius patiently, 'nobody can move that many troops that far very quickly. It took us months to get our army from Mesopotamia to the Indus, and we could use the sea. The Malwa cannot possibly move any large number of soldiers through Rajputana. The area is too arid. That means they'll have to march any reinforcements from the Ganges to the headwaters of the Jamuna, and then cross over to the headwaters of the Sutlej. It'll take them until well into next year, and you know it as well as I do.'
He jerked his head backward, pointing to the north. 'Until then, the Malwa will have to rely on whatever forces they already have in the Punjab. Which is a massive army in its own right, of course, but I'll willing to bet-I
Maurice did not argue the point, but he was not mollified either. 'Fine. But they can still bring three or four times as many men to bear as we've got. Sure, with good fortifications across the neck of the triangle, we can mangle them before they break through. But there are enough boats in these rivers to enable them to land troops downstream.'
With his finger, he traced on the map the Indus and Chenab rivers as they converged south of their own location. 'Almost anywhere along here. So we have to leave enough of a striking force, centrally positioned, to stop any landing before it gets established.' Gloomily: 'We can manage it for a while, sure. We've still got twelve thousand cataphracts, and we can use half of them for a quick reaction force against any amphibious attack. But. '
Gregory finished the thought for him. 'But sooner or later, they'll establish a beachhead. And when they do, the whole thing will start unraveling.'
'So let's make sure it happens later than sooner,' said Belisarius firmly. 'Because sooner or later, Menander and Eusebius are going to get here also. There's been no indication at all that the Malwa have any real warships on these rivers. Once the
* * *
At the moment, neither Menander nor Eusebius quite shared the general's confidence. First, because they still had to run the fortress which the Malwa had built on the Indus below the Chenab fork. Secondly, because they had found themselves laden with a far greater cargo than they had expected. Instead of towing one barge behind the
Ashot had insisted. Rigorously.
'I don't need them anymore,' he'd told them. 'After Calopodius broke that Malwa assault on the island-the one they must have been
'You'd think they would!' protested Eusebius.
Ashot shook his head. 'You're thinking like an engineer instead of a military man, Eusebius. A year ago, the Malwa still thought they were conquering Mesopotamia. The last thing in their minds was building armed and armored gunships to defend the heartland of the Indus valley. And that's not the kind of thing you can do overnight, as you well know.'
'You think they're going to lift the siege of Sukkur?' asked Menander.
'Who knows?' shrugged Ashot. 'If they had any sense, they would. Unless they can break into Sukkur, which there's no sign they can after weeks of trying, they'll start starving before too long. But I'm pretty sure the general was right: Link is still way off in Kausambi, not close enough to the scene to make informed decisions. So the Malwa commanders are probably operating based on the kind of 'stand at all cost' orders which seem reasonable to a commander a thousand miles away. And the Malwa high command has made crystal clear what the penalty is for disobeying orders.
'So take the twenty-four pounders,' he'd concluded. 'That'll still leave me the really big guns, in case of another Malwa assault. And Belisarius can use them up north. Those monsters
* * *
On their way up the Indus, Menander and Eusebius had picked up another load as well. A small one, however-just one man. When they came ashore on a boat to the island where Calopodius had made his stand, in order to pay him their regards, Calopodius pleaded with them to take him along.
Menander and Eusebius stared down at him. The young Greek officer was lying on a pallet in his tent. Nothing of his face above the mouth could be seen. The entire upper half of his head was swathed in bandages. Calopodius' trickery had delayed a Malwa assault, but it had not prevented it. He had still managed, by his heroism and that of his men, to beat off that attack. But not without suffering a great price. His force had suffered terrible casualties, and Calopodius himself had been blinded by the shrapnel from a mortar shell.
'Please,' he whispered. 'I'm useless here, now. Anthony of Thessalonica has taken charge of the forces since I was injured-doing a good job of it, too-and I've got nothing to do but lie here.' He managed a weak chuckle. 'Practicing my rhetoric and grammar. A pastime which pales very quickly, I assure you.'
The two naval officers hesitated. Neither one of them wanted to come right out and make the obvious rejoinder:
The rejoinder was so obvious that Calopodius already had an answer prepared. Clearly enough, his request was not a spur-of-the-moment impulse. The young nobleman-not much more than a boy, really-must have been lying there for days hoping for an opportunity to leave the place where he had lost his eyesight. And, in the fierce manner of youth, try to return to the fray despite the loss.
'The general will be able to use me in some fashion or other,' he insisted. 'He'll be fighting what amounts to a siege, on the defensive. Lots of quartermaster work, and a lot of that can be done without eyes. Most of it's arguing with soldiers over what they can and can't get, after all.' Again, the weak chuckle. 'And I really
Menander looked at Eusebius, then shrugged. 'Why not? If he really wants it.'
* * *
Eusebius had his doubts. But, within a day after leaving the island, the doubts began to recede. Much to his surprise-astonishment, rather-the noble Greek youth proved to have an aptitude for machinery. Or, at least, didn't look upon it as utterly unfathomable.
Working down in the hold with the steam engine, of course, was far too dangerous for a blind man. But, after a bit of experimentation, Eusebius discovered that a blind man who was willing to learn could manage the work of pumping the chamber of the fire cannon readily enough.
'It's kind of dangerous,' he said hesitantly.
'All the better,' replied Calopodius. Then, after thinking about it: 'Unless I'd be putting you and the crew at risk.'
Eusebius began to shake his head, until he realized the gesture would be meaningless to Calopodius. 'I didn't mean it that way. I meant it'll be risky being stationed up here when we run the fortress. There'll be picket boats, sure as anything. I'll have to torch them as we go past, or they might board the cargo ships. That will give the big Malwa guns on the fortress as good a target as anyone could ask for at night. You'd really be safer on the
But he didn't press the issue. Safety, clearly enough, was not what Calopodius was seeking. There was something almost suicidal about the young officer's eagerness to return to combat. As if, by sneering at death itself, he could somehow restore his sight. That part of it, at least, with which a young man measures his own