'That reminds me,' Raj said. 'Da Cruz, no drinking the water from the stream, or barrels until they've been blessed.' The priests used a ritual with a short prayer and a sprinkling of chlorine powder.

The senior noncom nodded. 'If ye order, ser,' he said.

Raj half-turned in the saddle. 'Meaning I wasn't always so superstitious, Top?' He shrugged. 'Let's say a little voice told me it'd be a good idea. Haven't had many down with the squirts, have we?'

Diarrhea was no joke in an army: it killed. More men than bullets, when you took them into an area with strange food and uncertain water, even if it didn't bother the locals.

'No, ser.' He saluted and wheeled off. Dinnalsyn flicked away the butt of his cigarette and chuckled.

'They didn't call you the King of Spades, either, a while ago-but I'm not objecting,' he said. 'I remember Sandoral-if there's one thing worse than sitting in a hole while someone shells you, it's not having a hole when someone shells you. Ah, our brothers in arms.'

The battalion commanders were riding up, some of them with a few of their subordinates. Dalhouse looked to have brought all his company commanders and most of the Lieutenants. The Cuirassiers had a little polished ceremonial breastplate on their tunics, a reminder of the time when they had worn back-and-breast armor. To Raj it had always seemed a curious habit in a combat zone-rather like hanging a shoot me here sign on your chest-but Dalhouse swore by the tradition. His crony Hingenio Buthelezi of the 1st Gaur Rangers was with him.

The officers reined in and saluted; Raj answered it and leaned forward with both hands on his pommel.

'Excellent work, Messers,' he said. 'We'll have sunset service at 1900, reveille at 0600, then, if I give the order-there may be a change of plans depending on fresh intelligence-we'll demolish the camp'-there was no point in leaving a usable fortress right behind them-'and make another day's march.'

'Sir.' Dalhouse made the word a half-insult; but then, his voice usually seemed to have that tone of throttled impatience, a you fool to all the world. The tips of his mustache were still waxed, and they quivered as he flung an arm northward. 'Do you intend to stop and camp with four hours of daylight remaining?'

Raj let his eyes rest on the thousands of men entrenching the army, then looked back to Dalhouse.

'Yes, Messer Major, that's more or less my intention.' Somebody coughed to hide a chuckle.

'Sir, we're moving like a collection of old women on washday! Every barbarian in two hundred kilometers will know we're here; they're already stripping their estates of stock and goods before we get there.'

'Well, Major Dalhouse. .' Raj went on, with a slight smile, pausing to light a cigarette. Who I would strip of his command and bust back to East Residence if I could, he thought wistfully. Far too influential for that, worse luck.

The match went scritch between thumb and forefinger.'. . this isn't a razziah or a slave-raid, you know. It's a campaign of conquest.'

'How are we supposed to bloody conquer them if we don't fight the sons of whores? We spend all our time digging dirt like peons. You-' He reconsidered. 'We're giving them time to concentrate.'

Raj looked behind Dalhouse at his junior officers.

tell them, Center said, as i told you. some of them will listen and learn.

As I listened and finally learned, Raj thought dryly. After arguing for a swift thrust at Port Murchison, because I'm so afraid of crawling along, waiting to be hit with everything the Squadron has. .

'Exactly, Major,' Raj went on aloud. 'Exactly. My actions are quite precisely calculated to make them fight; at a time and place and in a manner of my choosing, not theirs. I'm giving them enough time to mobilize some of their strength, and not enough to gather all of it. Making them come to us in bite-sized chunks, as it were.

'You see,' he went on, making a spare gesture with the hand that held the cigarette; it trailed a curve of blue smoke. 'We of the Civil Government have the most disciplined army in the world; apart from the Colony, the only disciplined army on earth.'

bellevue, said Center.

'The strength of that discipline is that it provides for a series of set contingencies of battle, but no drill can cover all the possibilities. So it behooves us to avoid the ones that aren't provided for, does it not? Our army is a battlefield army; all its weapons and its training are for set-piece battles in open country, where volley-fire and formation count. Its great weaknesses are close-quarter ambush and night attack; you may note, Major, that I'm carefully avoiding the possibility of either.'

He indicated the pillar of smoke that marked a Squadron farm in the middle distance.

'By advancing slowly on their capital and scorching the earth, we accomplish three things. Some of their chiefs will surrender, to spare their estates. Others will try to pressure their Admiral into a premature attack on us, also to spare their estates-and he can't afford to alienate too many of them. This is the richest land in the Southern Territories; the most influential nobles own it. And thirdly, we make the Admiral fear native uprising and a siege of Port Murchison-not that I intend to besiege it. The fortifications aren't modern, but we don't have a siege train-and sure as a tax-farmer grafts, if we sat down to siege we'd get a visit from Corporal Forbus.'

Cholera morbus; a few of the men winced. A close-packed camp in hot weather was an invitation to it.

observe said Center:

* * *

— and rows of men lay on pallets soaked in feces. They shook, and their faces had the fallen-in look of famine victims. Flies crawled over them in sheets; Raj saw one man too weak to blink as they walked over his eyeballs, although his chest still rose and fell. Renunciates in soiled white jumpsuits and overrobes went down the rows, trying to make the victims drink; water mixed with sugar and salt was the only thing that did cholera victims any good, that and the careful nursing that they could not give so many-

— and Raj watched from a mound as the armies closed in on both sides of a fortified siege-camp; the Squadron host from landward, a huge mass of men and metal that surged in disorderly dots from horizon to horizon, the whole land-levy of the enemy. On the other side stood the walls of Port Murchison, old-fashioned curtain and tower built but cored in concrete and faced with huge granite blocks, immune to the pecking of his fieldpieces. The gates opened, and out poured another army itself larger than his, the garrison of the town and Commodore Curtis Auburn back from Stern Island with the elite of the barbarian armies, moving to some sort of coordinated command. Viewpoint-Raj looked down. The parapets were thinly manned, units at half-strength or less. As he watched one man collapsed, knees too weak to hold up his weight even leaning against the firing ledge, and nobody moved to aid him. .

* * *

probability of serious epidemic 80 % ±, 6 %, Center said, probability of city surrendering to siege before return of Stern Island force 6 % ± 2 %. probability of decisive results from siege operations, too low to calculate meaningfully.

Raj blinked back to awareness, shocked as always at how little time had passed. Dalhouse was talking:

'— so how do we know the garrison will come out? Or that the Admiral will attack before he's reunited his forces?'

'Two reasons, besides the ones I've listed,' Raj said, holding up his fist. He raised a finger. 'First, because the Squadron are barbarians, who think like children-like thirteen-year-old boys, really. Honor demands they attack at once; glory and fame to those in the forefront, eternal shame to the laggard; they'll overthrow the Admiral if he doesn't lead them to battle, and he knows it. They haven't had any real wars to temper it with common sense lately, either. Second.' He raised another finger. 'What time of year is it, Major?'

Dalhouse blinked bewilderment. Raj swung an arm to indicate the harvested fields.

'Wheat and barley and beans, Major, a holy trinity like the Christo's. All cut, and carted to the villages, and stacked-hence easy to burn-but not threshed or bagged, and certainly not carried into Port Murchison. I doubt they have a year's reserve on hand, either.'

The officers nodded unconsciously; even absentee landlords who visited their estates only to hunt, collect rents, and lay the odd peon girl knew that threshing grain was the longest task in the farm calendar; not time-

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