stepped forward and knelt, adjusting the sights of their rifles. The running Colonials jinked and swerved as they fled; the two Slashers fired carefully. On the third shot one of the Arabs flopped forward, shot through the base of the spine. His face plowed into the dirt, mercifully hiding the exit wound. The other went down and then rose again, hobbling and clutching his thigh as if to squeeze out the pain of his wounds.
'Malash. The Spirit appoints our rising and our going down,' the other man grunted. He breathed out and squeezed the trigger.
Meanwhile the others had been rounded up. They sat, hands behind their heads, staring at their captors with the wide-eyed look of men who wanted very badly to wake from an evil dream and couldn't. The toppled wagon was burning fiercely now, with a thick flame that stank like overdone fish three days dead to begin with-
Belagez pointed with his saber. 'Get moving-push the other wagons over and tip them into the fire. Break open those crates, that'll be hardtack.' The Colonial version came in thin sheets about the size of a man's hand; it would burn too, in a hot fire.
He switched to Arabic, accented but fluent enough. 'You, you unbelieving sons of whores. Get to work.'
The teamsters and surviving guards joined his men in heaving more of the supplies onto the growing blaze. Another wagon toppled onto it, and the smell of frying apricots joined the stink, enough to make his stomach knot a little. The blaze would be visible for kilometers, but there was nobody alive to witness it-not unless a survivor or two from the last convoy they'd hit had run very fast. The twenty-wagon parties had been spaced quite evenly at four-kilometer intervals along the road, commendable march-discipline and very convenient for the battalions the
0300. This would be their last, they'd have to ride hard to make the rendezvous with the river flotilla by dawn. He certainly didn't want to miss the end of this campaign. The fire grew swiftly; his men were in a hurry too, and the prisoners worked very hard.
Idly, he wondered if they knew they were building their own funeral pyres. Probably. Still, it was the Spirit's blessing that men were reluctant to abandon hope while they still breathed.
'
Raj opened his eyes, then started awake. Suzette laid aside her
'This yacht has all the conveniences, my love,' she said.
'What-'
'Absolutely nothing has happened except what you said would. Belagez and the other landing parties made rendezvous. The Colonials have no idea what's going on-we're moving faster than the news. It's noon.'
'Ah.'
He took the cup and sipped. He felt less jangled than usual on waking, less of the sense that something catastrophic had happened and had to be turned around immediately.
Five years, one month seven days. defining 'worry' as your subtextual intent rendered the term.
Suzette smiled; not her usual slight enigmatic curve of the lips, but widely as if at some private joke. She shook her head.
'You've had five years to train them, Raj; and they're good men. They wanted you to rest while you could. They can carry out your orders, but we all want-need-you to be at your best when you're needed. Besides' — she dimpled slightly- 'you look so young and vulnerable when you're asleep.'
Raj laughed softly.
'What was that song?' he asked, finishing the coffee. Suzette poured him another and handed him breakfast- toasted hardtack, but she'd found some preserves for it, somehow.
'Very old. My tutor taught it me when I was a girl; Sister Maria, that was.'
'Doesn't sound religious,' Raj said.
the song is derived from the devotional poetry of st. john of the cross, Center said. the musical arrangement was made approximately two thousand four hundred years ago on earth.
'Ahem.' A voice from behind the door of the little stern cabin, out on deck. 'I hate to interrupt this touching domestic scene, but. .'
'Coming, Gerrin,' Raj said ruefully.
He stamped into his boots and fastened on his equipment, then scooped up the map he'd been working on late into the night. The sun outside was blinding, the shadow of the awning above hard-edged and utter black by comparison. Raj blinked out over the sparkling green waters of the Drangosh. For a kilometer either way, out of sight behind bends in the high banks, it was covered with rafts and barges and boats. With men and guns and ammunition. .
bellevue.
Raj smiled. Staenbridge and the other battalion commanders grinned back at him. Bartin Foley chuckled.
Raj raised his brows. 'Your thoughts, Captain?'
He spread the rolled paper on the deck; the officers and Companions crowded around it, kneeling, staking down the corners with daggers.
'
A snarling ripple of laughter went around the map. 'True enough.' Raj rested one hand on his knee and spread the fingers of the other over the map. It was his drawing, with Center supplying a holographic overlay for him to work with. 'Gentlemen, this is our latest intelligence on the enemy's bridgehead camp and the pontoon bridge over the Drangosh. You'll note-'
The sun was bright in the east, eye-hurting. He shaded his eye with one hand, the other hooked through the back of his sword belt. The breeze blew from the river and fluttered his djellaba; it snapped out the blue-and-silver Starburst of the Federation from the gate towers of Sandoral, as well. The air was heavy with the sickly scent of