He pointed to them. 'We don't have long to do what needs doing. My guess is, the fall rains start early this year.' He scowled. 'They would.'
'Nothing's ever as simple as we wish, eh, your Majesty?' Sarkis said. 'We'll just have to push on as hard as we can. Smash them once and the big worry goes, even if they keep on being a nuisance for years.'
'I suppose so.' But Sarkis' solution, however practical, left Krispos dissatisfied. 'I don't want to have to keep fighting and fighting a war. That will cause nothing but grief for me and for Phostis.' He would not say out loud that his kidnapped eldest might not succeed him. 'Give a religious quarrel half a chance and it'll fester forever.'
'That's true enough, as who should know better than one of the princes?' Sarkis said. 'If you imperials would just leave our theology in peace—'
'—the Makuraners would come in and try to convert you by force to the cult of the Four Prophets,' Krispos interrupted. 'They've done that a few times, down through the years.'
'And they've had no better luck than Videssos. We of Vaspurakan are stubborn folk,' Sarkis said with a grin that made Krispos remember the lithe young officer he'd once been. He remained solid and capable, but he'd never be lithe again. Well, Krispos wasn't young any more, either, and if he'd put on less weight than his cavalry commander, his bones still ached after a day in the saddle.
He said, 'If I had to rush back to Videssos the city from the borders of Kubrat now, I think I'd die before I got there.'
Sarkis had been on that ride, too. 'We managed it in our puppy days, though, didn't we?' He looked down at his own expanding frontage. 'Me, I'd be more likely to kill horses than myself. I'm as fat as old Mammianos was, and I haven't as many years to give me an excuse.'
'Time does go on.' Krispos looked northwest again. Yes, the clouds were gathering. His face twisted; that thought had too ominous a ring to suit him. 'It's moving on the army, same as it is on each of us. If we don't want to get bogged down in the mud, we have to move fast. You're right about that.'
He wondered again whether he should have waited till spring to start campaigning against the Thanasioi. Losing a battle to the heretics would be bad enough, but not nearly so dangerous as having to withdraw in mud and humiliation.
With deliberate force of will, he made his mind turn aside from that path. Too late now to concern himself with what he might have done had he made a different choice. He had to live with the consequences of what he had chosen, and do his best to carve those consequences into the shape he desired.
He turned to Sarkis. 'With the supply dump as ruined as it is, I see no point to encamping here. Spending a night by the wreckage wouldn't be good for the soldiers' spirit, either. Let's push ahead on the route we've planned.'
'Aye, your Majesty. We ought to get to Rogmor day after tomorrow, maybe even tomorrow evening if we drive hard.' The cavalry commander hesitated. 'Of course, Rogmor's burned out, too, if you remember.'
'I know. But from all I've heard, Aptos isn't. If we move fast, we ought to be able to lay hold of the supplies there before we start running out of what we brought from Nakoleia.'
'That would be good,' Sarkis agreed. 'If we don't, we're liable to face the lovely choice between going hungry and pillaging the countryside.'
'If we start pillaging our own land one day, we put ten thousand men into the camp of the Thanasioi by the next sunrise,' Krispos said, grimacing. 'I'd sooner retreat; then I'd just seem cautious, not a villain.'
'As you say, your Majesty.' Sarkis dipped his head. 'Let's hope we have a swift, triumphant advance, so we needn't worry about any of these unpleasant choices.'
'That hope is all very well,' Krispos said, 'but we also have to plan ahead so misfortune, if it comes, doesn't catch us by surprise and strike us in a heap because we were napping instead of thinking.'
'Sensible.' Sarkis chuckled. 'Seems to me I've told you that a good many times over the years—but then, you generally
'Am I? I've heard what was meant to be greater flattery that I liked less.' Krispos tasted the word. ' 'He was sensible.' I'd
sooner see that than most of the lies stonecutters are apt to put on a memorial stele.'
Sarkis made a two-fingered gesture to turn aside even the implied mention of death. 'May you outlast another generation of stonecutters, your Majesty.'
'And stump around Videssos as a spry eighty-year-old, you mean? It could happen, I suppose, though the lord with the great and good mind knows most men aren't so lucky.' Krispos looked around to make sure neither Evripos nor Katakolon was in earshot, then lowered his voice all the same. 'If that does prove to be my fate, I doubt it will delight my sons.'
'You'd find a way to handle them,' Sarkis said confidently. 'You've handled everything the good god has set in your path thus far.'
'Which is no promise the prize will be mine next time out,' Krispos answered. 'As long as I remember that, I'm all right, I think. Enough jabbering for now; the sooner we get to Aptos, the happier I'll be.'
After serving under Krispos for his whole reign, Sarkis had learned the trick of understanding when the Emperor meant more than he said. He set spurs to his horse—despite advancing years and belly, he still had a fine seat and enjoyed a spirited mount—and hurried away at a bounding canter. A moment later, the horns of the military musicians brayed out a new command. The whole army picked up the pace, as if fleeing the storm clouds piling up behind.
Harasos lay at the inland edge of the coastal plain. From it, the road toward Rogmor climbed onto the central plateau that took up the majority of the westlands: drier, hillier, poorer country than the lowlands. Along riverbanks and in places that drew more rain than most, farmers brought in one crop a year, as they did in the country where Krispos had grown up. Elsewhere on the plateau, grass and scrub grew better than grain, and herds of sheep and cattle ambled over the ground.
Krispos eyed the plateau country ahead with suspicion, not because it was poor but because it was hilly. He much preferred a horizon that stretched out for miles on every side. Attackers had to work to set an ambush in country like that. Here sites for ambuscades came up twice in every mile.