'And you're not dying on a cross right now,' Raj said in the same expressionless tone. Only his eyes moved, and the hand bringing the cigarette to his lips. 'Now leave.'

* * *

Suzette's fingers unfastened the buckle of Raj's military cloak and tossed it on the chaise-lounge behind them. She backed a step and curtsied deeply; Raj replied with an equally deep bow, making a courtiers leg. Music drifted through the open windows behind the black-velvet curtains, and the fading tramp of boots through the door.

'Messa Whitehall, might I have the honor of this dance?' he said.

'Enchanted, Messer Whitehall.'

Their right hands clasped, and she guided his left to her waist before they swirled away, alone on the dim-lit floor.

CHAPTER EIGHT

'I told you these'd come in useful,' Grammek Dinnalsyn said.

The weapon in the revetment of sandbags, timber and sheet-iron on the forecastle of the Chakra was a stubby cast-steel tube nearly as tall as a man, joined to a massive circular disk-plate of welded wrought iron and steel by a ball-and-socket joint. It was supported and aimed by a metal tripod, long threaded bars and handwheels to turn for elevation and traverse. The bore was twenty centimeters, more than twice that of a normal field-gun, and rifled. Beside the weapon was a stack of shells, cylinders with stubby conical caps and a driving band of soft gunmetal around their middle; at the rear of each was a perforated tube. The crews would wrap silk bags of gunpowder around the tubes before they dropped them down the barrel, a precise number for a given range at a given elevation. The base charge was a shotgun shell; when it hit the fixed firing pin at the bottom of the barrel, it would flash off the ring charges around the tube.

One thing Boyce had told them was that the casements of Fort Wager had no overhead protection. None was needed with normal artillery, given the placement of the fort.

'I know they're useful, Grammeck,' Raj said. 'Their little brothers were extremely handy in the Port Murchison fighting.' It had been more like a massacre, but never mind. 'They're also extremely heavy. Get me one that can move like a field gun, and I'll take dozens of them with me wherever I go.'

He walked down the deck of the Chakra, striding easily; it had been two days from the north coast to Port Wager, more than time enough to get his sea legs back. Many of the platoon of 5th Descott troopers aboard were still looking greenly miserable, landsmen to the core. They'd do their jobs, though, puking or not, and he intended to give them a stable firing platform. The huge sails of the three-master tilted above him; she was barque-rigged, fore-and-aft sails on the rear mast and square on the other two. Water, wind and cordage creaked and spoke; he squinted against the dazzle and made out the tall headland of Fort Wager to the north. There was a brisk onshore breeze, common in the early afternoon. Center had predicted it would hold long enough today-

probability 78 % ±3, Center corrected him. i am not a prophet. i merely estimate.

— and at worst, they could kedge in the last little way, hauling on anchors dropped out in front by men in longboats.

He leaned on the emplacement. The crew looked up from giving their weapon a final check and braced; most of them were stripped to boots and the blue pants with red-laced seams of their service.

'Rest easy, boys,' he said, returning their salute.

Artillerymen were mostly from the towns, and their officers from the urban middle classes; both unlike any other Army units in the Civil Government's forces. Many cavalry commanders barely acknowledged their existence. Pure snobbery, he thought, they're invaluable if you use them right. Their engineering skills, for example, and general technical knowledge. Far too many rural nobles weren't interested in anything moving that they couldn't ride, hunt or fuck, like so many Brigaderos except for basic literacy.

'This one's all up to you,' he went on to the gunners. 'Infantry can't do it, cavalry can't do it. You're the only ones with a chance.'

'We'll whup 'em for you, Messer Raj!' the sergeant growled.

'So you will, by the Spirit,' he replied. 'See you in the fort.'

Inwardly, he was a little uneasy at the way that verbal habit had caught on; Master Raj was the way a personal retainer back on the estate would have addressed him. His old nurse, for example, or the armsmaster who'd taught him marksmanship and how to handle a sword. Curse it, these men are soldiers of the Civil Government, not some barb chief's warband! he thought.

you are right to be concerned, Center said. however, the phenomenon is useful at present.

He took a slightly different tack with the cavalry troopers waiting belowdecks. The ship's gunwales had been built up and pierced with loopholes, but there was no sense in exposing the men or hindering the sailors before there was need.

'Day to you, dog-brothers,' he said with a grin, slapping fists with the lieutenant in command. 'Done with your puking yet?'

'Puked out ever-fukkin'-thin' but me guts, ser,' one man said.

'It'll be tax-day in Descott when you lose your guts, Robbi M'Teglez,' Raj said. He'd always had a knack for remembering names and faces; Center amplified it to perfection. The trooper flushed and grinned. 'You're the one brought me that wog banner at Sandoral, aren't you?'

'Yisser, Messer Raj,' the man said. 'Me Da got it, an' the carbine 'n dog ye sent. 'N the priest back home read t' letter from the Colonel on Starday 'n all.'

The troopers comrades were looking at him with raw envy. Raj went on: 'We'll be sailing in through the barb cannonade; oughtn't to be more than twenty minutes or so. Not much for those of you who saw off the wogboys at Sandoral. For those who weren't there-well, you get to learn a new prayer.'

'Prayer, ser?' one asked.

He had the raw look of a youth not long off the farm, barely shaving, but the big hands that gripped his rifle were competent enough. Most yeomen-tenants in Descott sent one male per generation to the Army in lieu of land-taxes. There were no peons in Descott, and relatively few slaves. Widows, however, were plentiful enough.

A squadmate answered him. 'Per whut weuns about t'receive, may t'Spirit make us truly thankful,' he said. 'Don't git yer balls drawed up, Tinneran. Ain't no barbs got guns loik t'ragheads.'

That brought a round of smiles, half tension and half anticipation. Those who'd waited all day in the bunkers while the Colonist guns pounded them, waiting for the waves of troops in red jellabas to charge through rifle-fire with their repeating carbines. . they'd know. Those who hadn't been there couldn't be told. They could only be shown.

'Once we're through, the gunners have their jobs to do. It's our job to make sure the barbs don't come down the rocks, wade out and take 'em the way the wild dog took the miller's wife, from behind. You boys ready to do a man's work today?'

Their mounts were back at the base-camp, but the noise the men made would have done credit to the half- ton carnivores they usually rode.

'So commend your souls to the Spirit, wait for the orders, and pick your targets, lads,' he finished. 'To Hell or plunder, dog-brothers.'

'I thought they were about to mutiny, from the sound,' Dinnalsyn said as Raj came blinking back into the sunlight on the quarterdeck.

'Not likely,' Raj said.

The headland was coming up with shocking speed and the four ships were angling in on the course he'd set,

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