too much of it.'
'Gets the men thinking like bandits,' Staenbridge agreed.
Suzette shook her head. 'Such perfect knights,' she said with gentle mockery. Then: 'Ah, Abdullah.'
The Druze entered with two suspicious troopers at his heel, their bayonets hovering not far from his kidneys, and Antin M'lewis to one side. He bowed: '
Raj leaned back in the captured folding chair, some
'That's all, men,' he said to the troopers. They hesitated, and his tone grew dry. 'I can handle one Arab, thank you.' They saluted, threw Abdullah a warning glance, and wheeled smartly out.
you are their talisman, Center said. without you they would feel themselves lost.
I'm only one man, Raj thought/protested. And I've got competent officers.
belief is its own reality.
Abdullah pulled documents from his ha'aik. He also accepted a goblet of watered wine; his particular brand of exceedingly eccentric shi'a Islam had some liberal notions.
'Lord,' he began. 'Ain el-Hilwa is swollen to bursting with refugees. Perhaps a hundred and seventy, a hundred and eighty thousand in all. They crowd the city and the suburbs outside the wall.'
Raj nodded. That was no surprise. The spy's long brown fingers moved dishes to tack down the map and papers against the warm breeze of evening.
'The garrison includes ten thousand men of the Settler's regulars and the
'Likewise, their officers quarrel. The provincial
The report flowed on, full and concise; units, strengths, weapons, dispositions, guns, the state of the fortifications and the water supply (which was good, since the city straddled the Ghor Canal). Center drew holographic projections over the map.
Abdullah's voice ceased. The others waited, in a silence filled by the flutter of canvas in the wind and the muted sounds of the camp; a dog howling, the brass of a trumpet calling, a challenge and response at an outlying vedette. Ten minutes later Raj blinked.
'Yes,' he said, softly, to himself. 'That should do.' He looked up. 'Excellent work, Abdullah. You won't regret it.'
Abdullah bowed. 'My life is to serve,
Raj waved a hand. 'If your son still wants that cavalry ensign's commission-and I'm still around and in command when he turns sixteen-it's his.'
A very rare honor for one not of the Star Church; although Abdullah's faith allowed its adherents to freely observe the ceremonies of other religions, where advisable. The Druze bowed again, more deeply.
'Gerrin,' Raj went on. 'We'll be concentrated by 0900 tomorrow?'
'All except for Osterville,' Staenbridge said. 'But he's-'
'— closer nor he said, ser,' M'lewis put in. 'Nobbut six klicks east.'
Raj nodded. 'Here's what we'll do. Bartin, write this up. At dawn-'
CHAPTER EIGHT
The band of Colonials swept out of a side street in the maze of alleys. The morning sun burned bright on their scimitars and spiked helmets; beneath their djellabas they had wound tight linen strips, the winding-sheets of men determined to seek Paradise in battle with the unbelievers.
The main street was narrow and crooked as well; only one file of troopers was between Raj and the attack. Horace spun beneath him with a roaring growl, and his hand swept out saber and pistol. A grid of green lines clamped down over his vision, and the outlines of the Colonial troopers glowed. One strobed; the one with his carbine in his hands. Still a hundred paces away: a long pistol-shot but not impossible for a skilled man on dogback to make with a shoulder-weapon. And the Arab looked good. .
Raj moved his wrist. A red dot settled on the Colonial's midriff. His finger squeezed the trigger.
A clang of steel on steel as a scimitar met his saber. He flexed his wrist to let the sharply curved blade hiss by, then cut backhand across the Arab's face. A second was barreling in with his blade upraised. Horace lunged with open mouth for the Bazenji's throat. Raj stabbed, and the point of his weapon went in below the breastbone. He ripped it free with desperate strength, wheeling. Suzette's carbine clanged and nearly dropped from her hands as she used it to deflect a cut. Raj rose in the stirrups and chopped downward; there was a jar like the blade hitting seasoned oak, and a splitting sound. It nearly wrenched from his hand, sunk to brow-level in the Colonial's skull, but the weight of the falling body pulled the metal free.
There had been no time for fear. Something contracted in a hard knot under his ribs when he saw his wife clutching at her upper arm.
'It's nothing, light cut,' she said.
He checked; in the background rifles barked as the troopers put down the dogs of the dead Arabs where they stood snarling over their masters' bodies. She was right; she held a dressing over the superficial wound while he tied it off.
'Damn, that was too close,' he said. 'Anyone else wounded?'
His bannerman had gashed fingers where he'd used the staff to block a cut. Suzette heeled Harbie closer and went to work on that. The sergeant of the color-party was looking at him wide-eyed.
'Spirit, ser,' he blurted. 'Five dead wit' five shots!'
Raj felt a flush of embarrassment. He wasn't actually a first-rate pistol-shot; the sword was his personal weapon of choice, and with that he was very good. With Center's eerie trick, you didn't
Whatever works, he thought.
precisely.
'Keep moving,' he said sharply.
The suburbs of Ain el-Hilwa were burning already, as the Civil Government troops shot and hacked their way through the crowds who ran screaming towards the gates. Shells went by overhead in long ripping-canvas arcs, to crash on the massive stone-faced walls behind the moat. It was a wet moat, full of canal water, right now dark with the heads of refugees swimming across; and getting no help from the garrison. The gates were jammed tight with a press of humanity.
'Forward!' he said again. 'Dammit, bugler, sound
The brazen scream cut through the white noise of the crowds, the gathering roar of the flames. Sheer press of numbers was slowing the advance despite complete surprise. The people ahead
