breechclout. Raj amplified: 'A great feast; meat, drink, music, women.' Sandoral's dockside knocking-shops had agreed to furnish volunteers, heavily subsidized from Army funds. At that, Skinners rarely actually hurt cooperating females; they considered it beneath a warrior's dignity. 'Lights-lights in the sky.'
The barbarian's eyes lit with comprehension. 'Ah, medicine dance!' He crossed himself vigorously. 'Kill cattle for Juscrist an' de
He ran into the hut, returned with his rifle and shooting-stick. The weapon was taller than he, beautifully cared-for and gleaming with cleanliness. He opened the breech with a
'Feast!' the chieftain bellowed, shaking his weapon in the air. '
Now, how do I tell them they've got to get on a barge? Raj wondered. Ah, I'll tell them it's part of our battle-magic.
* * *
'Cursed if I'd have been able to handle this without you filling in on the paperwork, Gerrin,' Raj said, throwing down the muster roll.
'Well, I haven't been bloody good for much else, have I?' the other man said. 'I'm going to be ready by the time that arsecutter Tewfik shows up, if it kills me.'
Thunder rolled outside the window; man-made thunder, now that the thin rains of winter were giving way to the clarity of spring; volley firing from the ranges outside Sandoral. It was still pleasant to have a blaze going in the fireplace of an evening, although noon was already giving more than a hint of the savage furnace heat summer would bring to the Drangosh Valley; the thin desert air lost warmth quickly, once the sun was down. The smell of coal smoke mixed pleasantly with kave and wet boots steaming, and the underlying tang of massage oil and tobacco; there was still a smell of the day's stew from the bowls soaking in the kitchen bucket.
'You kill yourself, not be much good fighting,' Fatima said sharply, in accented but passable Sponglish, as she kneaded the scented oil into the mass of scars along Gerrin's flanks. 'Lie still!' She walked away toward the kitchen.
'Insolent wench,' Barton said from the corner chair, without looking up from his noteboard.
'Your own fault, you manumit me,' she called, coming back in with a bowl of heated towels and laying them over Gerrin's ribs.
'And
'You going to adopt it?' Raj said.
Gerrin nodded, reaching out from his stomach-down position to snake a sheaf of papers out of a pile. 'Jellica and I aren't going to produce any, not after six years of regular attempts,' he said amiably. 'Doesn't matter who the father is-' he glanced over fondly at Foley, who wrinkled his nose at him '-and it'll be rather a relief to stop trying. I only did because I couldn't stand the thought of my brothers-in-law inheriting the estate; my sisters are dear girls, but lack my taste in men.' Foley threw a half-eaten dried fig without looking up, bouncing it off the older man's skull. 'How are the infantry shaping?'
'Better than I expected,' Raj said. 'That's the Kelden Brigade out there now; Jorg has a real gift for it.' Getting Menyez on the strength had been a stroke of luck.
'Nice enough sort, if you avoid all mention of dogs,' Foley continued. The door banged open. 'Speaking of dogs,' he continued, 'what do you call people who track mud in the door?'
'Soldiers,' Kaltin Gruder said, but he stopped to use the bone scraper. 'Ground's firming up nicely, though. What's that?' he continued, looking over Gerrin's shoulder at the document in his hands. 'Nice fancy seals.' He turned and called up the stairs, 'Can't a man get a drink, around here?'
Fatima climbed halfway down the stairs and sat on a tread, cradling the infant to her breast. '
'It's yet another missive from our distinguished Chancellor, moaning and whining about the infantry drawing cash,' Gerrin said, skimming it expertly into the fireplace. The heavy linen paper curled and browned on the bed of coals before bursting into flames.
'Well, what does he expect?' Gruder said, taking down a cup from the mantel and dipping the mulled wine out of the pot. 'Field armies
Raj laughed, with a hard edge to it; he picked up a coal from the fire with the tongs, lighting a cigarette. The red glow highlit new lines scoring down from beside the heavy beak of his nose.
'He'd rather we let them sit in their billets all winter, worrying more about the barley than drill, and bring them here by forced marches just before the campaigning season started so they could be good and miserable as well as exhausted and slack when we needed them. It'd be cheaper.'
'Spirit, does the man
'No, he's just an East Residence pen pusher who's never been more than two days' travel from the city,' Raj said, leaning an elbow on the mantle. 'But don't underestimate him; he's no fool, and he's not lazy. . notice how he's been becoming steadily less polite, all winter? Getting back into favor at court, I'd say.'
'I'd like to get him out here on the border
'Sugar, little cinnamon, half a lime, and pinch of, how you say,
The Arab girl switched the baby to the other breast; Raj stared into the fire, and Kaltin watched a trifle wistfully. 'Tell me something, Fatima,' he said. 'How did you know you were pregnant, when Tewfik kicked our butts out of El Djem?' She had shown up half-dead when they were nearly at the border, another of the steady trickle of fugitives that came in all during the nightmare retreat.
'Not know then,' she said, stroking the boy's cheek as he suckled.
Kaltin blinked at her. 'Then why on earth
'Oh, plenty reason,' she said. 'I fifth daughter of concubine with no sons, mother die have me. I servant, not even valuable like slave; always talk back, get beaten. No dowry, so have to marry poor man, or be small-small-' she looked over at Foley.
'Insignificant,' he told her.
'In-sig-nif-icant concubine like mother.' For a moment an old anger brooded in her eyes, the slights and petty cruelties of the harem. 'Then, El Djem fall, I have no house and not virgin any more. No Muslim man want me; have to be whore on streets if I stay in Colony. Better here, I know these two good masters, not cruel men: take risk of dying, but better that than life so hard.' She grinned. 'I right, too. Now I freedwoman, my son heir to rich
'Mad from boredom,' Gerrin said.