does it distress you to have to give orders and trust others to carry them out? Center commented drily.
Raj laughed, drawing awed looks from some of the troopers.
is it?
Raj blinked in surprise, then turned to Suzette. 'How's our mutual friend Berg?' he said, raising the glasses again.
The first transport was being towed between the ends of the breakwater; he could see the long blue swells creaming into surf on the rough line of interlocked stone that guarded the harbor. A substantial ship, bluff-bowed and three-masted; sailors were standing on the bare spars, at their ease-and away from the rowdy mass of Squadron warriors crowding the rails.
'Nervous,' Suzette said quietly. 'He's. . not a fighting man, after all.'
'Well, I hope he doesn't bugger off for the bundu-the Admiral's out there somewhere,' Raj said.
Two more ships were coming into the harbor mouth; there was a crowd of them dotted across kilometers of calm ocean, rising and falling with the long swells, bows to the wind under jibsails as they waited for their tows. Forty or more sail, and beyond them the long snaky shapes of war-galleys, their beaks flashing as the crews dipped the oars just enough to keep them head to the waves and holding station. They made a brave sight, familiar from the visions Center had sent him; from what he'd been told, they could be smelled a kilometer or better downwind. The Squadron navy used chained slaves and convicts as rowers, ten men to an oar and single-banked. The slave- barracks over on the military harbor had provided thousands of extremely enthusiastic volunteer laborers for the Civil Government forces, even though they were three-quarters empty with the decline of the Squadron's naval power.
'Feel that trembling in the ground?' Raj asked.
'What?' Suzette replied.
Raj gave a harsh laugh. 'That's old 'Geyser' Ricks trying to burrow back from Starless Hell and strangle his descendants for ineptitude,' he said.
Suzette sat beside him and took his hand; he squeezed back gratefully, feeling a little of the tension go out of his back. 'What's going to happen?' she said softly.
'I don't know,' he replied honestly. 'As far as I can tell, I've got everything covered. . but this isn't like a normal battle where you can sit on a hill and
The first transport was nearly to the docks, and a dozen more were inching in as the tug crews bent to their oars. It would be the men first, the dogs second, and then the warships following through to the inner harbor; tradition, for the Squadron. Convenient for him. .
'Spirit knows what'll happen when they do
* * *
Hereditary Sector Commander Henrik Martyn leaped down the gangplank and fell full-length to kiss the grimy concrete of the dock.
'Home!' he howled, between smacks. 'Eats! Booze! Pussy! No more hardtack, no more hairy hardcases!'
The men behind him on the ship yelled good-naturedly and poured down after him, slinging their weapons; servants and slaves would follow with their baggage.
'Fuckin' waste of a campaign,' one of them said.
Martyn nodded, rising and dusting himself off; he was a tall young man, full-bearded and with shoulders like a bear. 'Damn straight, Willi,' he said. 'Go to Sadler Island, sit in front of the city walls, scratch our butts, come back because somebody's seen a Civvie boogieman behind a peach tree.'
'Too much peach brandy, maybe,' one of his friends laughed. 'Hey, come back to my place for dinner? Try out your lies on Marylou.'
'Sure, can't head home until tomorrow anyway-then I'll kick some peon butt. Lazy bastards probably let my wheat rot in the fields.'
They shrugged their slung flintlocks to their backs and strolled off away from the docks, peering around for the friends and family who should have been there to greet them. The broad paved area along the piers was deserted, except for the thousand or so men from the ships fresh in dock. No stevedores but the few handling the ground-lines, and those went about their work with heads down and mouths shut; no bustle around the anchored merchantmen, no trains of carts and slaves at the warehouses. It even
'Where the fuck is everyone?' he asked, as he and a half-dozen others ambled up one of the cobbled roads toward the central plaza. 'There a bullfight or a baseball game on today?' He hitched uneasily at his swordbelt
'Naw-nothin' scheduled; it's Holy Week, remember? There aren't even any
'Those rabbit-hearted bastards? You've got to be-
One of the dockside taverns seemed to be open, from the tinkling of a piano coming through the rippling glass-bead curtain that closed the entrance. A girl was standing in the doorway; Martyn angled over for a better look.
'Hooo, darlin', wait for
He ducked through the bead curtain of the door, blinking in the dim light. Then his eyes focused on the girl; she was leaning her buttocks back against the rail of the bar and raising her skirt in both hands. A
Darkness, and the floor rushing up to meet him.
* * *
'Is he dead, Antin?' Joni asked anxiously, dropping her skirt and hurrying forward.
Antin M'lewis chuckled as he slapped the chamois leather bag of lead shot into his palm, then bent to expertly slit the Squadron warrior's wallet loose from his belt. It was gratifyingly heavy; he tossed it to the girl.
'Joni,' he said; then paused for a moment. Outside a single shout sounded, a few meaty smacks as of steel buttplates chunking into flesh, and the distinctive butcher's-cleaver sound of a bayonet driven into a belly. Scouts dragged bound or dead or feebly twitching bodies in through the door.
'Not th' first man led ter ruin by 'is prick-er the fifty-first, Joni,' he went on. 'Ye jist git yer pretty ass back t' th' door; keep on earnin' that there manumission an' dowry, flies to the honeypot. Hell, er a 'baccy shop fer yer very own!'
A calloused hand smacked down on her backside. She pouted uncertainly and resumed her pose in the door as a voice sounded softly from the second story.
'More comin!'
* * *
'Mounted party, Cap'n,' said the man with the mirror on a stick poked up above the window. ''bout twenty a' em. Real important lookin' barbs, fer sure. Nice dogflesh.'
'Wait for it, everyone,' Barton Foley said. 'Not until they get past the dogleg.' His stump was itching; it always did, just before. It itched, and he saw the hand-what was left of the hand-just after something snatched at it, and he looked around from urging his men on toward the Colonists and it was