he'd feared, and neither was the one behind the enemy vanguard. That heartened him, since it was the first mistake the civvies had made.
'— one more volley and we'll give them the steel.'
He touched toes to Jo's forelegs, signaling her to stock-stillness, and fired his own rifled carbine. More as a gesture than anything else, but it made him feel better. A little.
'Everybody mount up,' he called, riding out in front again. Enemy bullets pocked the earth around him.
POUMPF-
'Easy, girl, easy,' he said. He drew a revolver in one hand and his basket-hiked broadsword in the other. No sense in getting too subtle, just get out in front and wave them forward. '
His legs clamped on the barrel of his dog. Jo howled and leaped forward off her hindquarters, building to a flexing gallop. From the chorus of shrieks behind him, human and canine, most of the scratch force were following. The
'Shit,' Carstens said again. Lanceheads were bristling down on either side of him, but the enemy had had plenty of warning, and their dogs were fresher and less heavily burdened. The distance closed to a hundred meters, still beyond mounted pistol shot-and several of the blue-coated, dark-faced troopers turned in their saddles to pump fists at the Brigade troops with an unmistakable single finger raised. Then the gap began to grow again, with increasing speed. The fieldgun was a little slower, but it had had an extra half-kilometer of distance to start with.
He looked left and right, standing in the stirrups. Yes. Those tell-tale dust-clouds
'Halt,
'Tommins, Smut, Villard,' Carstens snapped to his under-officers. 'Stop 'em,
He spurred his dog out ahead of the closest pack, curving in front of them and waving his sword in their faces. That made some of them pull up, at least.
'
The man was literally frothing into his beard; Carstens wasted no time. The point of his broadsword punched into the man's stomach through the stiff leather and doubled him over with an
Carstens felt no regret; you had to stop a rout before it got started, and a rout forward was just as bad as one going to the rear.
'How many have we?' he asked his second-in-command, when they had the band mostly turned around and trotting to the rear.
'Seven hundred, maybe fifty more,' the man said. 'Fifty dead 'r down, and two hundred kept after the civvies.'
Carstens grunted, grunted again when rifle fire broke out anew over the rise a kilometer to their rear where the pursuit had gone. What the incurably reckless had thought was a pursuit, at least. More rifle fire than before, much more, twice as many guns. 'We won't be seeing them again,' he said.
'Nohow,' the other man agreed. 'But the civvies will be up our ass again in half an hour.'
Carsten pushed back his visor and looked northeast and southwest. Then he blinked dust out of his eyes and unlimbered the telescope again, on one flanking force and then the other.
'Suckered, by the Spirit!' he said.
At a soundless question, he went on: 'Fucking
The Civil Government company had been dangled out like a chunk of meat in front of a carnosauroid, and now a much bigger set of jaws were closing on the outstretched head. On his whole force, if he hadn't pulled back.
'We still delayed them,' his second said.
Faint thunder rolled from a dear sky. Coming from the southeast, down the road toward the bridge. Field guns; Carstens' trained ear counted the tubes, separating the sound from the echoes.
'Four guns,' he said hollowly. Men were shouting and calling questions to each other all along the rough column. The alarm turned to panic as a burbling joined the deeper sound of the cannon. Massed rifles volleying.
'Bastards are ahead of us,' the second-in-command said. His voice was calm, the information had sunk in but not the impact. 'At the bridge, waiting at the bridge.'
'Hang on, Sylvie!'
The Brigade warriors rocked into a gallop behind him.
* * *
'Well done, Major Bellamy,' Raj Whitehall said, clapping him on the back. He raised his voice slightly. 'Very well done, you and your men.'
The headquarters company of the 2nd Cruisers raised a roaring shout at that, Bellamy's name and Raj's own, crying them hail.
'And you too, Gerrin,' Raj went on, as the three senior officers and their bannermen turned to ride down the length of the refugee column.
One or two of the wagons were burning-that always seemed to happen, somehow-but most were in place, looking slightly forlorn with their former owners sitting beside them with their hands clasped behind their necks under guard. Or off digging hasty mass graves for the tumbled bodies, stacking captured weapons, the usual after- battle chores. The smoke smelled of things that should not burn, singed hair and cloth.
'It was young Bellamy's plan,' Gerrin said. 'And a damned sound one, too.' He nodded to where a priest- doctor and his assistants were setting up, with a row of stretchers beside them. As they watched, the first trooper was lifted to the folding operating table. 'Not many for the butcher's block, this time.'
Ludwig flushed with pleasure and grinned. 'The 5th carried off the difficult part, drawing away their rearguard,' he said. 'My boys just had to stand in the gully and shoot over the edge when they tried to rush the bridge.'
A dispatch rider pulled up in a spray of gravel, his dog's tongue hanging loose. He wore the checkered neckcloth of the 5th Descott over his mouth as a shield against the dust. When he pulled it down the lower part of his face was light-brown to the caked yellow-brown of his forehead.
'Ser!' he saluted.
Staenbridge took the papers, opened them at Raj's nod. 'Ah, good' he said. 'From Bartin. Perino and Sala are secured. A few minor skirmishes; terms of surrender, hostages, supplies on the way-the usual.'
He flipped to the other papers. 'And the same from Ehwardo, Peydro and Hadolfo,' he said, listing the other