'Correct left one,' he said. The crew turned the iron traversing screw one full revolution, and the mortar barrel moved slightly to the left. 'Fwego.'
Right into the gun positions along the lip of the bluff facing Old Residence.
'Fire for effect!' he barked. The other rafts cut loose as well.
* * *
The Brigaderos rifles went into the cart with a clatter. Rifleman Minatelli straightened with a groan and rubbed his back; it had been a
A wail came up from the field nearby. The Brigade had offered a truce in return for permission to remove their wounded and dead. That had turned out to mean friends and often family coming to look through the bodies when the Civil Government troops had finished stripping them of arms and usable equipment. Or bits of bodies, sometimes. Minatelli swallowed and hitched the bandanna up over his nose. A little further off big four-wheeled farm wagons piled with dead were creaking back to the enemy lines. The priests said dead bodies bred disease; Messer Raj was pious that way, and the word was he was happy to see the Brigaderos taking them off for burial.
One of the women keening over a body looked his way. 'Why?' she shouted at him. 'What did we ever do to you? Why did you come here?' She spoke accented Spanjol, but probably didn't expect him to understand.
The young private pulled down his bandanna. 'I was
The other members of his squad laughed. There were six all told of the eight who'd started the day; Gharsia dead, and one man with the Sisters, his collarbone broken by a bullet. They moved on, leading the two-ox team, and stopped by another clump of bodies. These had been ripped by canister, and the smell was stronger. Minatelli let his eyes slide out of focus; it wasn't that he couldn't watch, just that it was better not to. He bent to begin picking up the rifles.
'Fuckin'
Thumbnail-sized silver coins spilled from a leather wallet the dead Brigadero had had on his waist belt. Whistles and groans sounded.
'Best yet,' the corporal said, pouring the money back into the wallet and snapping it shut. 'Here.'
He tossed it to Minatelli, who stuffed it into a pocket. The young Old Residencer was the best of them at arithmetic, so he was holding the cash for all of them.
It hit him again.
That made him grin; it also made him more conscious of what was at his feet. That was a mass of cold intestines, coiled like lumpy rope and already turning gray. Insects were walking over it in a disciplined column, carrying bits off to their nest, snapper-ants with eight legs and as long as the first joint of his thumb. He retched and swallowed convulsively.
'Hey, yu shouldda been ad Sandoral,' one of the other men said slyly. 'Hot nuff tu fry 'n egg. Dem wogs, dey get all black 'n swole up real fast, 'n den dey pops lika grape when yu-'
Minatelli retched again. The corporal scowled. 'Yu shut yor arsemout',' he said. 'Kid's all right. Nobody tole yu t' stop workin'.'
The platoon sergeant came by. 'Yor relieved,' he said. 'Dem pussy militia gonna take over. We all get day's leave.'
' 'Bout time,' the squad corporal said.
The noncom had volunteered his squad for very practical reasons; he finished cutting the thumb-ring off the hand of the corpse at his feet before he straightened.
'C'mon, boys, we'll git a drink 'n a hoor,' the corporal said.
'I, uh, just want some sleep,' Minatelli said.
The front of his uniform was spattered with blood and other fluids from the bodies he'd been handling. He should be hungry, they'd had only bread and sausage at noon, but right now the thought of food set up queasy tremors in his gut. A drink, though. . And the thought of a woman had a sudden raw attractiveness. It was powerful enough to mute the memory of the day gone by.
The corporal put an arm around his shoulders. 'Nu, best thing for yu,' he said. 'Wash up first-the workin' girls got their standards.'
* * *
The Priest of the Residential Parish entered the door at the foot of the long room as if he were walking to the great altar in the cathedron, not answering a summons sent with armed men. His cloth-of-gold robes rustled stiffly, and the staff in his hand thumped with graceful regularity as he walked toward the table at the other end of the chamber. The inner wall was to his left, a huge fireplace with a grate of burning coals; to his right were windows, closed against the chill of night. He halted before the table that spanned the upper end of the room and raised his gloved hand in blessing.
Got to admire his nerve, Raj thought. He has balls, this one.
'Why have you brought me here, my daughter?' Paratier said. 'A great service of thanksgiving for the victory of the Civil Government and the army of Holy Federation Church is in preparation.'
He stood before the middle of the long table. Behind it sat Suzette, flanked by scribes and a herald; Raj was at one comer, his arms crossed. The walls of the room were lined with troopers of the 5th Descott, standing at motionless parade rest with fixed bayonets. Evening had fallen, and the lamps were lit; the fireplace on the interior wall gave their bright kerosene light a smokey coal-ember undertone on the polished black-and-white marble of the floor and the carved plaster of the ceiling. The Priest looked sternly at Suzette, then around for the seat that protocol said should have been waiting for him. Raj admired his calm assumption of innocence.
'The Spirit of Man of the Stars was with us this day,' Suzette said softly. 'Its will was done-but not yours, Your Holiness.'
'
'Lady Whitehall is acting in her capacity as civil legate here,' Raj said tonelessly. 'I am merely a witness. Please address yourself to her.'
Paratier, however. . there seemed to be something about promotion beyond Sysup that acted as a filter mechanism. Perhaps those with a genuine vocation didn't
'Bring in the first witness,' Suzette said.
A door opened, on the table side of the wall beyond the fireplace. A man in the soiled remnant of priestly vestments came through in a wheeled chair, pushed by more soldiers. His head rolled on his shoulders, and he wept silently into the stubble of his beard.
'What is this?' Paratier boomed indignantly. 'This is a priest of Holy Federation Church! Who is responsible for this mistreatment, abominable to the Spirit?'
'I and officers under my direction,' Suzette said. She lifted a cigarette in a long holder of sauroid ivory. 'He was apprehended attempting to leave the city and make contact with the barbarian generals. The ciphered