of the heavier pieces on the wall could reach that far.'
'No,' Jorg Menyez said, scanning down the line of units with the big tripod-mounted field glasses. 'We're playing for time, so there's no sense in poking the sauroid through the bars. Ah, yes. Notice something?'
He stepped aside and Felasquez bent to the eyepieces. A forest of banners was going up before the Settler's pavilion. 'Ali, Hussein the Wazir, the Grand Mufti of Sinnar, the Gederosian Dervishes. . wait a minute.'
Menyez nodded. 'No Seal of Solomon. Tewfik's not here.'
'Unless they want us to think that.'
'No, that's not the way Colonials think.'
Felasquez nodded. 'I'd still feel easier if you weren't splitting up so much of the 24th Valencia,' he went on.
'The garrison infantry need stiffening; we haven't had enough time to work them into first-class shape.'
'You can't stiffen a bucket of spit with a handful of lead shot,' Felasquez said.
Menyez clapped him on the shoulder. 'It's not as bad as all that. They're trained men, sound at bottom; they've just been neglected recently. Standing behind a parapet and shooting is about the easiest type of combat for 'em. They just need some examples. How're the militia-gunner volunteers showing?'
'Pretty well; still have to see how they stand fire, of course. But the ones who stayed were the ones who
Along the walls of Sandoral men stood to the parapet and looked out the merlons, but their numbers were sparse. Most of the garrison stood to in the cleared space within the walls, or waited in their billets. Apart from them the city was a ghostly place, where little moved but rats and cats almost as feral.
'It's all waiting now,' Menyez went on, 'and I want my supper. Runner; message to the
* * *
This time the viewpoint shifted to a point on the rail line west. Raj recognized it: a long viaduct over a gully that was a torrent in the winter and spring. The burning remnants of the wooden trestle bridge lay scattered below.
A long file of Colonial dragoons rose from prayer and rolled up their issue rugs. Naiks and rissaldars screamed at them, and they returned to their work-hacking through the ties of the railway line. As each section of track came loose, they carried it at a run to one of the bonfires that blazed at intervals down the line and threw it on. The dry wood flared up like tinder, and in the heart of the furnace-heat he could see the thin strap iron turning cherry-red and then yellow, slumping and twisting into a mass of metallic spaghetti that would have to be carted to the forges and rolling-mills as scrap.
Raj nodded to himself, tight-lipped. No surprise; a railroad was the best military target there was. But it had taken generations to get the line from Sandoral to East Residence completed; until Barholm Clerett came to the throne and Raj reconquered the territories to the west, there always seemed to be a more urgent short-term priority.
The Colonials were doing a good professional job of the wrecking, and there were a lot of them.
* * *
Dust smoked up from the road. Sweat dripped off the twenty-hitch train of oxen as they strained at the trek- chain. The big tented wagon rolled forward, its axles groaning, man-high wheels turning at the steady, inexorable pace that would take it ten kilometers a day and neither more nor less. It was one of a line of two dozen, between them taking up several kilometers of road; all of them had the Crescent pyrographed on the wood of their sides, and the Peacock stenciled on their tilts.
The load was sacked grain, and bales of a repulsive-looking dried fish; even in the holographic vision he could imagine the mealy, oily smell of it.
The escort sank down and unlimbered the goatskin water-bottles at their waists, stacking their light lever- action rifles. Infantry, with short curved falchions at their belts rather than the scimitars of the cavalry. Tewfik wouldn't be wasting his best men on duty like this, but here was about a platoon of them. The drovers were civilians, slight men in ragged clothes.
A voice called, and drovers and soldiers alike knelt in the dust, performing the ritual washing and unrolling their mats. A call, and they knelt to distant Sinnar, the holy city where the first humans on Bellevue had landed, bringing a fragment of the ka'ba from ruined Mecca.
* * *
A Colonial officer with gold-rimmed spectacles and a green-dyed beard stood beside a hole. It was outside the walls of Sandoral-he could see the city in the middle distance-but outside ordinary artillery range. There were several hundred Colonials working in the hole, mostly stripped to their loincloths, but they had the look of soldiers. Probably engineers; the Colony had whole units of them, rather than expecting line units to be able to double up at need, the way the Civil Government did. He'd never seen men work harder, or with more skill.
Picks were flying; plank ramps went down into the hole, and wheelbarrows came up at a trot, full of earth. The dirt was piled neatly in heaps not far away; other men were filling sandbags from the heaps. Still more shaped timber, raw beams from orchards around the city, or seasoned timber salvaged from houses. A knocked-down floor of planks waited to be assembled.
A bunker, Raj decided. Cursed large one, too. Probably for Ali.
* * *
Raj blinked, conscious of the eyes on him. They were all used to his. . spells of inattention. . by now.
He cleared his throat. 'Ali's reached Sandoral and he's digging in around the city. So far he hasn't mounted an assault-bringing up his siege train, at a guess. He's got the full fifty thousand men with him; it must be straining his supply of wagons and fodder to keep them fed. Tewfik's banner isn't with the main army.'
There was a stir at that. 'What do we do,
'We dig, and we wait.'
'Wait for what?'
'For the wogs' — he nodded toward Ain el-Hilwa- 'to take the bait. In which case, we-'
The officers waited in silence, a few taking notes. 'Is all that clear?' Raj finished.
'No reserve?' Staenbridge asked.
'Not this time; it's a calculated risk, but so's this whole expedition.'
He turned and looked at the Arab city, surrounded by the smoldering wreck of its suburbs, crammed to the very wall with refugees.
'Either this will be easy, or it'll be impossible,' he said.
probability of action proceeding according to current projections, 78 %±7, Center said helpfully.
'I'd put it at about three to one on easy,' he went on. 'If not, we'll just have to react fast.'
'Ser.' Antin M'lewis was Officer of the Day; he slipped into the circle around the fire. 'Major Hwadeloupe t'see yer.'
Raj finished the mouthful of fig-bread and dusted his hands, leaning back on the cushions-someone had salvaged them from a nearby Colonial mansion, and they were all resting on them and the Al Kebir carpets from the same source. A roast sheep on rice had been demolished, and they were punishing the sweetmeats and pastries