massive jingling as twenty-five hundred riders formed by battalions behind him: He heeled Horace forward as the banner of Poplanich's Own moved up to one side.
'Sound the charge!'
At both ends of the Civil Government line sabers slithered free by the thousand, a blinding mirror- brightness.
His sword swept up and then down, pointing to the dispersing mass of the enemy.
'Charge!'
* * *
'Coward! Whelp! You fled, you fled!' the women screamed at the defeated Squadron warriors.
Many of the Squadron levy had brought their households along with them to share the victory, leaving them in the wagon-fort a few kilometers behind the line. Now the women stood on the wagon-beds with their black shawls fluttering, striking clumsily at the fugitives who had made it this far, at their husbands and brothers and sons; they had swords and clubbed muskets in their hands, or stock-whips.
'Coward, coward!'
Some of the wagons were burning, and women threw themselves into the flames. Others cut their children's throats before stabbing themselves, or hanged themselves from the tall wagon-poles with their children at their heels. Raj passed a family strung up thus like obscene fruit; beyond them, inside the great circle of wagons, men who had thrown away their weapons were rolling under the feet of the milling frantic oxen to die. Their bawling covered the screams, an undertone to the roar of flames and the occasional crackle of shots. A field-gun went bouncing by, on its way to some pocket of holdouts.
'Let's get some order here, Spirit-dammit!' he shouted hoarsely, waving the revolver at a clump of cavalry. 'Get these people under control!'
They cantered over and began prying two wagons apart, slashing at the hide bindings with their sabers; one trooper looked up as dead feet brushed his head, swore and cut twice to sever the rope. His comrades shouted curses as they heaved and bodies rained down on their heads. Infantry were already at work inside, rounding up the survivors, stunning and binding; when the wagons were heaved apart a column of prisoners came through at a stumbling run, kicked, prodded with bayonets, and whacked along with rifle butts. A blond girl fell almost at Raj's feet; she would have been very pretty, except for the swelling purple bruise across one side of her face. She spat at his feet and stumbled off with the rest, holding a torn blouse across her breasts as a shoulder pushed her.
'You, Captain,' Raj said. The officer saluted. 'Get more of these wagons dragged apart or we'll lose them all to the fire. Move the oxen out but keep them bunched. And for the merciful Saints' sake, keep the men in hand!'
Ludwig Bellamy was looking white, even in the ruddy light of the fires and the dust-shrouded afternoon sun.
'Your father made the right decision,' Raj said, sweeping his pistol in a circle over the scene. His voice was a little louder than need be, even with the level of background noise. 'He knew the Squadron was going to lose. This is what defeat is, Messer Bellamy. Avoid it.'
Raj heeled Horace into a canter, and the command-group and the Scouts followed, past growing roped-off squares where Squadron prisoners sat under guard with their hands behind their heads. The fires were dying as the soldiers pulled the wagons away; other men were spreading the tilts as groundsheets and piling loot in a rough- sort, separate heaps for fabrics and weapons and whatnot. Many of M'lewis's men were casting longing glances at the wagons-a sack was one of the rare pleasures of a soldier's life-but their Lieutenant was there. . and Messer Raj had a name for seeing his men right.
He halted as Muzzaf Kerpatik rode up with a platoon of the Slashers: The men dropped back as they halted their mounts nose-to-tail, and Raj leaned forward to listen. The little southerner was not formally a fighting man, but his face was black with powder smoke under his cap and puggaree, and the Komar-made pepperpot pistol stuck through his sash had seen use this day.
'I have the Admiral's wagons under close guard,' he said. Leaning closer and speaking in a whisper: 'I estimate the value of what we found at two hundred twenty thousand gold FedCreds, Messer Raj-and he escaped with the best of it. Many of his private papers were left, as well.'
Even then Raj shaped a silent whistle. Enough to equip and mount the entire Expeditionary Force, and pay it for a year; that was making war support war with a vengeance! So
'Also, I have these men,' he said. Raj looked at the column of prisoners behind the Slashers, roped neck and neck. Ordinary-enough Squadron warriors, from their looks; a few had the rich equipage of high nobles. Then the Slasher Captain rode up; it was Pehdro Belagez, the new commander. He carried a Squadron banner over his shoulder, and swung it down for Raj to see.
'These
'The families? Slave market.'
'And the men?' Belagez asked. The troopers leaned forward in their saddles: Mekkle Thiddo had been a popular commander.
Raj looked at the big burly figures who stood with downcast eyes in their bonds.
'Crucify them,' he said.
Chapter Thirteen
'Thank you, no,' Raj said firmly.
The delegation under the high arched gate looked downcast and astonished. It was fairly impressive for something cobbled together on short notice: the heads of the merchant guilds in long robes of a cut that had been fashionable in East Residence fifty years ago; a scattering of old aristocracy families who had hung on under Squadron rule; the underground Arch-Syssup of Port Murchison, understandably overjoyed to be representative of the State church once more; with a chorus of hymn-singing girls in garlands and white dresses and a flock of priests. .
'Messers, Messas,' he went on, in careful Spanjol, 'my troops have just won a major battle and their blood is up. The war isn't over, and it wouldn't do discipline any good to let them scatter in a rich city at night-nor, to be blunt, would it do your city much good, at all. We'll enter the city tomorrow, and I'll call you together then to settle billeting and other arrangements.'
'But. . but, there are still Squadrones inside the walls, thousands of them!' the head of the delegation said. Even now he was visibly afraid of the overlords. All to the good, or else the mobs would have torn them all limb from limb.
'No-no, most of the fighting men marched out with Conner Auburn.' And died, many under the walls when the gates were shut against them. 'They crowd into the Earth Spirit temples, and into our Star churches, even, seeking sanctuary.'
'Then give it to them. Post guards. Tomorrow, Messers, if you please.'
Raj stretched and sighed, looking upward. The stars were very bright, with only a three-quarter Miniluna to dispute the heavens; it was mildly warm as they rode away from the torchlit bulk of Port Murchison's walls. Those were the old-fashioned curtain type, twenty meters high and ten thick with a rubble core in none too good condition, but they bulked huge in the darkness. The cookfires of the Expeditionary Force were a glowing constellation of their own, through the groves and gardens outside the city; it was rich land, well tended with noblemen's country-seats. Wagons and handcarts were creaking out of the city with food and cooked delicacies, although the guards were supposed to be turning back anything too blatant in the way of liquor or whores. Mostly