'I've had my eye on you, I say. Particularly since you made that piebald of yours go for the man that trained him. Up here in Orithyia we see a lot of strong men and a lot of brave ones mostly when we step over their bodies. We see a lot of smart ones too, and nineteen out of twenty are too smart to be of use to anybody, including themselves. What's valuable are men, and sometimes women, who've got a kind of power, the power that makes other people want to do what they say. I don't mean to brag, but I've got it. You've got it too.'

'It hasn't been overwhelmingly apparent in my life before this.'

'Sometimes it takes the war to bring it out. That's one of the benefits of the war, and since it hasn't got many we ought to appreciate the ones it does.

Severian, I want you to go down to the coach and treat with these man-animals.

You say you know something about them. Get them to come out and help us fight.

We're both on the same side, after all.'

I nodded. 'And if I can get them to open the doors, we can divide the money among us. Some of us, at least, may escape.'

Guasacht shook his head in disgust. 'What did I tell you just a moment ago about being too smart? If you were really smart, you wouldn't have ignored it. No, you tell them that even if there's only three or four of them, every fighter counts.

Besides, there's at least a chance the sight of them will frighten these damn freebooters away. Let me have your contus, and I'll hold your position for you until you come back.' I handed over the long weapon. 'Who are these people, anyway?'

'These? Camp followers. Sutlers and whores men as well as women. Deserters.

Every so often the Autarch or one of his generals has them rounded up and put to work, but they slip away before long. Slipping away's their specialty. They ought to be wiped out.'

'I have your authority to treat with our prisoners in the coach? You'll back me up?'

'They're not prisoners well, yes, I suppose they are. You tell them what I said and make the best deal you can. I'll back you.'

I looked at him for a moment, trying to decide whether he meant it. Like so many middle-aged men, he carried the old man he would become in his face, soured and obscene, already muttering the objections and complaints that would be his in the final skirmish.

'You've got my word. Go on.'

'All right.' I rose. The armored coach resembled the carriages that had been used to bring important clients to our tower in the Citadel. Its windows were narrow and barred, its rear wheels as high as a man. The smooth steel sides suggested those lost arts I had mentioned to Guasacht, and I knew the man-beasts inside had better weapons than ours. I extended my hands to show I was unarmed and walked as steadily as I could toward them until a face showed at one window grill.

When one hears of such creatures, one imagines something stable, midway between beast and human; but when one actually sees them as I now saw this man-beast, and as I had seen the man-apes in the mine near Saltus they are not like that at all. The best comparison I can make is to the flickering of a silver birch tossed by the wind. At one moment it seems a common tree, at the next, when the undersides of the leaves appear, a supernatural creation. So it is with the man-beasts. At first I thought a mastiff peered at me through the bars; then it seemed rather a man, nobly ugly, tawny-faced and amber-eyed. I raised my hands to the grill to give him my scent, thinking of Triskele.

'What do you want?' His voice was harsh but not unpleasant.

'I want to save your lives,' I said. It was the wrong thing to say, and I knew it as soon as the words had left my mouth.

'We want to save our honor.'

I nodded. 'Honor is the higher life.'

'If you can tell us how to save our honor, speak. We will listen. But we will never surrender our trust.'

'You have already surrendered it,' I said.

The wind died, and the mastiff was back in an instant, flashing teeth and blazing eyes.

'It was not to safeguard gold from the Ascians that you were put into this coach, but to safeguard it from those of our own Commonwealth who would steal it if they could. The Ascians are beaten look at them. We are the Autarch's loyal humans. Those you were set to guard against will overwhelm us soon.'

'They must kill me and my fellows before they can get the gold.'

It was gold, then. I said, 'They will do so. Come out and help us fight, while there is still a chance of victory.'

He hesitated, and I was no longer sure that I had been entirely wrong to speak first of saving his life. 'No,' he said. 'We cannot. What you say may be reason, I do not know. Our law is not the law of reason. Our law is honor and obedience.

We stay.'

'But you know that we are not your enemies?'

'Anyone seeking what we guard is our enemy.'

'We're guarding it too. If these camp followers and deserters came within range of your weapons, would you fire on them?'

'Yes, of course.'

I walked over to the spiritless cluster of Ascians and asked to speak with their commander. The man who stood was only slightly taller than the rest; the intelligence in his face was the kind one sometimes sees in cunning madmen. I told him Guasacht had sent me to treat in his stead because I had often spoken with Ascian prisoners

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