such subtle distinctions define the world.

Fine, he told the universe. If it's all the same to you, I'd prefer to die now, please. Apparently the universe wasn't listening.

He'd often ridden in carts, of course. As a boy he'd loved haymaking, riding in the wain as the men pitched the hay up. His job had been to compress it by trampling it down; he could remember how it yielded and bounced under his feet like a flexing muscle, as if it was trying to trick him into falling over. He'd loved the view, the fact that for two weeks a year he could be taller than the grownups and see further. He'd imagined himself in a chariot, not a cart, bringing home the spoils of war in a grand procession.

He flicked his eyes sideways and saw the junk heaped up all round him; spoils of war. An ambition fulfilled, he thought, and passed out.

He woke up because something hurt; in fact, he came out of sleep trying very hard to scream, but he didn't seem able to make any sound. Very bad indeed.

'Splint,' someone said. He tried to remember what a splint was, but there were holes in his memory large enough for words to fall through. Anyway, whoever it was didn't seem to be talking to him. It hurt, though, and he clenched his hands to work out the pain.

Oh, he thought. Maybe not so bad after all.

'He's awake,' someone said, and a face appeared above him; huge and round, like an ugly brick-red sun. Its eyes, round and watery blue, looked at him as if he was a thing rather than a human being; then the head lifted and looked away. 'He'll keep,' the voice said.

He cleared his throat, but he couldn't think of the right words; he felt awkward, because this was a social situation his upbringing hadn't prepared him for. 'Excuse me,' he said.

The eyes narrowed a little, as if seeing a man inside the body for the first time. 'It's all right,' the man said. 'You'll be fine. You had a bash on the head, and your arm's busted. Nothing as won't mend.'

'Thanks,' he replied. 'Where is this?'

The man hadn't heard him, or wasn't prepared to acknowledge his question. 'You got a name, then?'

Yes, but it's slipped my mind. 'Gyges,' he heard himself say. It took him a moment to realize he was telling the truth.

'Gyges,' the man repeated. 'What unit were you with?'

'Fourteenth Cavalry.' Also true. Fancy me knowing that.

'Rank.' A different voice; someone talking over the man's shoulder.

Oh well, he thought. 'Lieutenant colonel,' he said.

The man's left eyebrow raised. 'Well now,' he said-he was talking to his friend, the man behind him. 'Not so bad after all.'

'Excuse me,' he said-that ridiculous phrase again, like a small boy in school asking permission to go to the toilet. 'Who are you?'

The man smiled. 'Nobody important. Don't worry, we'll get you back to your people, soon as you're fit to be moved.'

That didn't make sense; they were Eremians, he was an officer in the Mezentine army, so surely he was a prisoner of war. 'Thank you,' he said, nevertheless.

The man made a tiny effort at a laugh. 'No bother,' he said. 'Lie still, get some rest.'

'What happened in the battle?' he asked, but the man had gone. Besides, he realized, he wasn't all that interested in the narrative. He knew the gist of it already.

Lieutenant Colonel Phrastus Gyges, formerly of the Seventeenth Mercenary Division, currently on detached service with the Fourteenth Cavalry. He remembered it now-not clearly, not yet; it was like thinking what to say in a foreign language. But at least he had a name now, and a body to feel pain with, and possibly even a future; there was a remote chance that, sooner or later, he'd once again be the man whose name he'd just remembered, rather than an item of damaged stock in the back of a wagon. Well; he'd come a long way in a short time.

They had apparently tied a thickish stick to his left forearm. Splint, he remembered; and the man had said his arm was broken. Also a bash on the head. The battle; and he'd taken his helmet off so as to be able to hear the reports of his subordinate officers. Bloody stupid thing to do. It occurred to him that this Lieutenant Colonel Gyges couldn't be all that bright.

He lay back, and saw rafters. He was in a barn. For some reason, he felt absurdly cheerful; he was alive, no worse damage than a broken arm, and all he had to do was lie peacefully for a while until someone took him home. Meanwhile, he'd been granted leave of absence from his life. A holiday. Nothing wrong with being in a barn. He'd been in barns a lot when he was a kid. Better than work, that was for sure.

More sleep. This time, he felt himself slide into it, like the crisp sheets on a newly made bed. When he woke up, there was a different face looking down at him. It was just as pink and ugly as the other faces, and it had a large, three-sides-of-a-square scar on the left cheek, just below the eye. A smile crinkled the scar's shiny red skin.

'Hello,' the man said. 'So you're Phrastus Gyges.'

A different kind of voice. The accent was still horrible. He hadn't been able to get used to the way people spoke his language on this side of the sea. The Mezentines were bad enough, with their flat, whining drawl; the savages (the Eremians, at least; he hadn't heard a Vadani yet) did unspeakable things to all the vowels, and didn't seem able to tell the difference between Ts and Ds. This man was an Eremian, but he didn't sound like the men who'd found him.

'That's right,' Gyges replied.

The man nodded. 'It's good to be able to put a face to the name at last. I'm Miel Ducas.'

Not good.

'You've heard of me, then?' the man went on.

Gyges nodded. He hadn't been expecting anything like this.

'I hope you don't mind me introducing myself like this,' Ducas said, 'but we've been fighting each other long enough that I feel I've known you for ages. Ironic, isn't it, that we should both end up here.'

Gyges breathed out slowly. 'Where's here, exactly?' he said.

Ducas grinned. 'Haven't you figured that out yet? These people-our hosts, I should say-are the hard-working souls who clear up our messes. They bury the dead, salvage clothing and equipment, and ransom the survivors. We owe them our lives, by the way, so don't go getting judgmental. In my case…' He shrugged. 'Well, why not? A little melodrama won't hurt. Your showing up here's probably signed my death warrant.' He frowned. 'I could've put that better, I suppose, but not to worry. You see, they've been trying to decide what to do with me: ransom me back to the resistance or sell me to the Mezentines. As far as I can tell, there can't have been much in it either way, but now you've appeared on the scene they've come to a decision. Since they're going to have to take you back to your camp anyway, they may as well send me along with you. Simple economy of effort, really; saves them having to make two journeys, and they've only got the one cart. While it's away ferrying the likes of you and me around, they can't make collections or deliveries. It's perfectly rational once you see the thinking behind it. Are you thirsty? I can fetch you some water if you like.'

Gyges looked at him. Miel Ducas, his enemy. 'Thank you,' he said; and Ducas stood up and went away.

But that's absurd, he thought. These people are Eremians; he's the rebel leader. They wouldn't hand him over to us. He thought about that some more. People who made their living by robbing the dead might not be able to afford finer feelings. Besides, the Eremians were a treacherous people. Hadn't one of them opened the gates of Civitas Eremiae? Presumably money had changed hands over that; he hadn't heard the details, or not a reliable version, at any rate. Besides, money wasn't the only currency. The Mezentines' stated objective was the obliteration of the Eremian nation, and large-scale treachery could well be the price of a blind eye turned to a few survivors. The thought made him uncomfortable; it was something he hadn't really considered before. Wiping out an entire people; it must be strange to have a mind that could process ideas like that. Meanwhile, the last vain hope of the Eremians had just gone to fetch him a drink of water.

'There you are,' Ducas said, handing him a short horn cup. 'There won't be anything to eat until the rest of the men get back. Probably a sort of sticky soup with barley in it. It's an acquired taste, and I haven't, yet. Am I annoying you, by the way, or are you usually this quiet? The thing is, there's not many people about here to talk to.'

Both hands around the cup; he managed to get two mouthfuls, and spilled the rest. 'I'm sorry,' he said. 'I'm

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