invested their pay in their father-in-laws' shops. Bought interests in grain-shipping.'
'The whole bit,' grumbled Ashot. 'Yeah, you're right. Fucking garritroopers. Always takes weeks to shake 'em down on a campaign. Spend the first month, solid, wailing about their declining property values back home.'
The light of understanding came, finally, to her officers.
Or so, at least, she thought.
'You're right, Antonina!' cried Hermogenes excitedly. 'That'll work!'
He cast eager eyes about, scanning the immediate environment of the fortress. 'Most of 'em probably live right here, right in Nicopolis. We'll start by burning everything to the ground. Then-'
'Find their wives and daughters,' chipped in his executive officer, Callixtos. 'Track 'em down wherever they are and-'
'Won't need to,' countered Ashot. 'Any women'll do. At this distance, the garrison won't be able to make out faces anyway. Just women being stripped naked in the street with us waving our dicks around and threatening to-'
Antonina erupted. '
Startled, her horse twitched. Antonina drew back on the reins savagely. Wisely, the horse froze.
'Cretins! Idiots! Morons-absolute morons-the whole lot! You want me to end a small civil war by starting a big one? What the fuck is wrong with you?'
They shrank from her hot eyes. Antonina turned in her saddle and transferred the glare back to Menander.
'
For a moment, Menander was too stunned to speak. Then, clearing his throat, he said, 'Well. Well. Actually, while you were talking I was thinking about how the general-Belisarius, I mean-handled the situation with the Kushans. The
He stopped, floundering. Drew a deep, shaky breath.
'What I mean is, I was struck by it at the time. How the general used honey instead of vinegar.'
Antonina sighed. Relaxed, a bit.
'You're promoted,' she growled. '
The eyes which she now turned on her assembled officers were no longer hot.
Oh, but they were very, very cold.
'
Deep breath.
'
A wintry smile.
'Yes.
She gazed at the fortress, still smiling.
'Let the soldiers smell those meals, while they're chewing on their garrison biscuits. Let them think about their warm beds-with their wives in them-while they sleep on the battlements in full armor. Let them think about their little shops and their father-in-laws' promises that they'll inherit the business, while Ambrose gives speeches.'
'They'll
He squared his shoulders, faced Antonina bravely. 'They won't come back. Not with us here. Hell,
An arctic smile. 'That I can believe. Which is why you
Suddenly, Antonina's usual warm smile returned. 'Alone? Of course not! What a silly idea. My grenadiers will stay here with me. Along with
All the officers now stared at Euphronius. The young Syrian met that gaze with his own squared shoulders. And then, with a grin.
'Great idea. Nobody'll worry about
Ashot turned back to Antonina. The short, muscular Armenian was practically gobbling.
'What if Ambrose sallies?' he demanded. 'Do you think your grenadiers-
Antonina never wavered. 'As a matter of fact-
She pointed down the thoroughfare to the fortress. 'We're not on an open field of battle, Ashot. There's only two ways Ambrose can come at me. He can send his men through all the little crooked side streets-and I will
All the officers were shaking their heads. No cataphract in his right mind would even think of driving armored horses through that rabbit warren.
'—
She bestowed a very benign, approving smile upon the boulevard in question.
'And
She drew herself up in the saddle, sitting as tall as she could. Which was not much, of course.
'Do as I say.'
Her officers hastened to obey, then, with no further protest.
Possibly, that was due to the iron command in her voice.
But possibly-just possibly-it was because when she drew herself up in the saddle the blazing sun of Egypt reflected off her cuirass at such an angle as to momentarily blind her generals. And make a short woman seem like a giantess.
By noon of the next day, the first families began trickling back into Nicopolis. Antonina was there to greet them, from the pavilion she had set up in the very middle of the boulevard.
The first arrivals approached her timidly. But, finding that the legendary Antonina-
By nightfall, hundreds had returned, and were slowly beginning to mingle with the grenadiers. All of the Syrians could speak Greek now, even if many of them still spoke it badly. So they were able to communicate with the soldiers' families. Coptic was the native language of most of those folk, but, as was universally the case in Alexandria, they were fluent in Greek as well.
By morning of the day after, the soldiers' families were quite at ease with the grenadiers. True, the men were a bit scary, what with their bizarre and much-rumored new weapons. But their wives were a familiar thing, even if