Chapter 19
The Iron Triangle
There was no reception for Anna at the docks, when she arrived at the Iron Triangle. Just a small gang of men hurrying out from the bunker to catch the lines thrown from the
She was a bit surprised. Not disgruntled, simply. .
Surprised.
Menander seemed to understand. 'We do this as quickly as possible these days,' he explained apologetically. 'The Malwa have spotters hidden in the reeds, and they often fire rocket volleys at us whenever a convoy arrives.'
As if his words were the cue, Anna heard a faint sound to the north. Vaguely, like a snake hissing. Looking up, she saw several rockets soaring up into the sky.
After a moment, startled, she realized how far away they were. 'I didn't know they were so big.'
'They have to be. Those are fired from the Malwa lines, miles to the north. At first, the spotters would fire small ones from the reeds. But that's just pure suicide for them. Even the Malwa, after a while, gave it up.'
Too uncertain to know whether she should be worried or not, Anna watched the rockets climb higher into the sky.
'They're headed our way, girl,' Illus said gruffly. He pointed toward the low bunker toward which they were being towed. The roof of the bunker was just tall enough for the
'Yes. I suppose.' Anna gathered up the heavy skirts and began moving forward. Illus followed her, with Abdul helping Cottomenes limp along. Behind them came the four boys.
Glancing back, she saw that Menander had remained in his place. He was still watching the rockets. From his apparent lack of concern, she realized they must be veering off.
'Keep moving, girl,' Illus growled. 'Yes, the damn things are completely inaccurate. But they don't always miss-and any rocket that big is going to have a monster of a warhead.'
She didn't argue the point. Illus was usually cooperative with her, after all, and this was his business.
Still, most of her mind was concentrated on the sound of the coming rockets. Between that, the deep gloom of the approaching bunker, and the need to watch her feet moving across the cluttered deck, she was caught completely by surprise when the fanfare erupted.
That happened as soon as the bow passed under the overhang of the ship bunker.
Cornicens, a lot of them, and some big drums. She wasn't very familiar with cornicens. They were almost entirely a military instrument.
'Oh,' she said. 'Oh.'
Illus was grinning from ear to ear. 'I was starting to wonder. Stupid, that. When you're dealing with the general.'
* * *
By the time the fanfare ended and the bow of the ship bumped gently against the wharf inside the bunker, Anna thought she might be growing deaf. Cornicens were
The cheers of the soldiers even seemed dim, in her ears. They couldn't be, of course. Not with that many soldiers. Especially when they started banging the hilts of their swords on their shields as well.
She was startled by that martial salute almost as much as she'd been by the cornicens.
She glanced at Illus. He had a peculiar look on his face. A sort of fierce satisfaction.
'Do they always do that?' she asked, almost shouting the words.
He shook his head. That gesture, too, had the air of satisfaction. 'No, girl. They almost never do that.'
* * *
When she saw the first man who came up the gangplank, after it was laid, Anna was startled again. She'd learned enough of Roman uniforms and insignia to realize that this had to be Belisarius. But she'd never pictured him so. The fact that he was tall and broad-shouldered fit her image well enough. But the rest. .
She'd read all of Macrembolitissa's work, so she knew a great deal about the general. Despite that knowledge-or perhaps because of it-she'd imagined some sort of modern Nestor. Wise, in a grim sort of way; not old, certainly-abstractly, she knew he was a young man-but still somehow middle-aged. Perhaps a bit of gray in his hair.
She'd certainly never thought he would be so handsome. And so very young, to have done all that he had.
Finally, as he neared, she found an anchor. Something that matched the writings.
The general's smile
She said as much.
Belisarius smiled more crookedly still. 'So I'm told. Welcome to the Iron Triangle, Lady Saronites.'
* * *
The general escorted her off the
She had to concentrate so much on that task that she wasn't really looking at anything else.
They reached the relatively safe footing of the wharf.
'Lady Saronites,' said the general, 'your husband.'
She looked up, startled again.
'Oh,' she said. 'Oh.'
There came, then, the most startling thing of all that day. For the first time in years, Anna was too shy to say a word.
* * *
'It's not much,' said Calopodius apologetically.
Anna's eyes moved over the interior of the little bunker where Calopodius lived. Where she would now live also. She did not fail to notice all the little touches here and there-the bright, cheery little cloths; the crucifix; even a few native handcrafts-as well as the relative cleanliness of the place. But. .
No, it was not much. Just a big pit in the ground, when all was said and done, covered over with logs and soil.
'It's fine,' she said. 'Not a problem.'
She turned and stared at him. Her husband, once a handsome boy, was now a hideously ugly man. She had expected the empty eye sockets, true enough. But even after all the carnage she had witnessed since she left Constantinople, she had not once considered what a mortar shell would do to the
Stupid, really. As if shrapnel would obey the rules of poetry, and pierce eyes as neatly as a goddess at a loom. The upper half of his face was a complete ruin. The lower half was relatively unmarked, except for one scar along his right jaw and another puckerlike mark on his left cheek.
His mouth and lips, on the other hand, were still as she vaguely remembered them. A nice mouth, she decided, noticing for the first time.
'It's fine,' she repeated. 'Not a problem.'
A moment later, Illus and Abdul came into the bunker hauling her luggage. What was left of it. Until they were gone, Anna and Calopodius were silent. Then he said, very softly:
'I don't understand why you came.'
Anna tried to remember the answer. It was difficult. And probably impossible to explain, in any event.