'Kill the rich! Kill the rich!
'Down with the heretics!'
This time a scattering of rocks did fly. Amid the uproar and confusion, Raj saw the old syndic go to the edge of the platform. He gave an order to a man standing there, a Stalwart mercenary in a livery uniform. The man slipped away into the night. A few seconds later, something came whirring in out of the dark and went
Shots rang out, and the voices rose to a surf-roar of noise. Many of the dignitaries on the podium deck dove to the floorboards, and some ran around the other side of the fountain that protruded through the middle, taking shelter behind its carvings of downdraggers and sea sauroids. Cabot Clerett stayed statuesquely erect, his cloak held closed with one hand. As would have been expected of any escort, Raj and Staenbridge closed up around the bannerman and the officer.
'This may be about to come apart,' Gerrin said tightly.
Raj shook his head, eyes moving over the tossing sea of motion below. The militia had-mostly-turned about and faced the crowd with their weapons. Bands of house retainers made dashes into the edge of it, arresting or clubbing men down, apparently according to some sort of plan; he saw Anarenz carried off in a cloak by a dozen men who were apparently his friends, and the crowd slowing pursuit enough for him to escape.
'I think they'll get things back under control,' Raj said.
'Silence in the ranks,' Cabot said distantly, his eyes fixed on something beyond the current danger.
A kettledrum beat, and there was a massed thunder of paws. A column of Brigaderos cavalry burst into the square, with men scattering back ahead of it; they spread out along one edge facing in, their dogs snarling in a long flash of white teeth and their swords bright in their hands.
Silence gradually returned, with the massed growling a distant thunder in the background. De Roors stepped up to the podium. 'Let the vote be tallied!' he said.
It went swiftly; votes were by guild, with the rich merchant and manufacturer guilds casting a vote each, as many as the mechanics' organizations with their huge memberships, and the single vote of the laborers. Those whose leaders were absent were voted automatically by de Roors, as
He turned to Cabot and bowed. 'Most Excellent, with profound regret-I must ask you to leave our city. March on, for Lion City holds its walls against all attack.'
* * *
'Move it up to a trot,' Raj said, as soon as they were beyond the gate.
'Sir,' Cabot replied stiffly. 'Our dignity-'
'— isn't worth our asses,' Raj said, grinning. 'Trot, and then gallop, if you please, messers.'
He touched his heels to Horace. The Civil Government banner flared out above them, the gold and silver of the Starburst glowing beneath the moons.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Fatima cor Staenbridge twisted her hands together in the waxed-linen apron that covered the front of her body. The operating tent was silent with a deep tension, a dread that knew what it awaited. Doctors, priests and Renunciate Sisters, waited with their assistants beside the tables; beside them were laid out saws and chisels, scalpels and curiously shaped knives, catgut and curved needles and piles of boiled-linen bandages. Jars of blessed distilled water cut with carbolic acid waited beside the tables, and more in sprayers along with iodine and mold- powder. And bottles of liquid opium, with the measuring-glasses beside them. Most battalions had priest-healers attached. The ones with the Expeditionary Force had served together long enough that General Whitehall had organized them into a corps under a Sysup-Abbot.
'Will it be bad?' Mitchi asked. 'Kaltin told me not to worry.'
Kaltin Gruder's concubine was about nineteen, with long bright-red hair now bound up on her head; the milk complexion, freckles and bright-green eyes showed it was natural. She and Fatima waited at the head of the other helpers; Civil Government armies had fewer camp followers than most, and those led by Raj Whitehall fewer still- one servant to every eight cavalry troopers, others for officers, and the inevitable spill-over of tolerated non- regulation types. Raj insisted that everyone without assigned military duties do
'It will be worse than last year,' Fatima said. Mitchi had been a gift from the merchant Reggiri just before the Expeditionary Force left Stern Isle for the Squadron lands. The casualties in the Southern Territories had been light. Light for the Civil Government force.
'I hope, not as bad as Sandoral,' Fatima went on. Softly: 'I pray, not so bad as that.' The tubs at the foot of the operating tables had been full that day, full of amputated limbs.
She knew the litany now, from experience; bring the wounded in, and sort them. A dog-sized dose of opium for the hopeless, and take them to the terminal section. Bandage the lightly wounded and put them aside for later attention. For the serious ones-probe for bullets, debride all foreign matter out, suture arteries and veins, disinfect and bandage. Sew flaps of muscle back into place and hope they healed straight. Compound fractures were common, bone smashed to splinters by the heavy fat lead slugs most weapons used. For those, amputate and hope that gangrene didn't set in. Dose with opium before surgery, but there was no time to wait and sometimes it didn't work. Then strong hands must hold the body down to the table, and the surgeon cut as fast as possible, racing shock and pain-induced heart failure as well as blood loss.
A hand tugged at Mitchi's sleeve. 'Is there going to be shooting?' a small voice asked in Namerique.
They both looked down in surprise. It was the girl Kaltin had brought back. She'd been very quiet and given to shivering fits and nightmares and didn't like to be alone.
'Not near here, Jaine,' Fatima said gently. 'We safe here.'
The child blinked, looking around as if fear had woken her from a daze. 'There was a lot of shooting when Mom and Da went away,' she said. 'We left the farm and went to a place in the woods with a lot of other people. Da said we'd be safe there, but then there was shooting and they went away. They told me to wait and hide under the bundles.'
Mitchi met Fatima's eyes over the child's head, then lifted her into her lap. 'Shhh, little one,' she said, holding her close.
'They're not coming back, are they?' Jaine asked solemnly. Fatima shook her head. The child sighed.
'I didn't think they were, really,' she said. Her face twitched. 'Then the Skinner came. I thought Skinners only came and got
The child went on: 'He didn't skin me and eat me the way Skinners are supposed to eat bad children. He tried to get up on top of me as if I were a big grown-up lady.' Her voice was still quiet, but a little shrill. 'He
'Nobody can hurt you here, little sparrow,' Fatima said, stroking the girl's face.
'I know,' Jaine nodded. 'Master Gruder came in and shot him.' Her face relaxed slightly. 'Then he kicked him off and shot him lots more times.'
The two adults exchanged another glance; nobody had told them
The noise of the camp was subdued, but the roar from the city was like distant surf. Fatima shivered again, remembering the sound when the 5th broke into El Djem like water over a crumbling dam. It had been dawn then, just the start of another day like every other. The day when everything changed.
A few minutes passed and then Jaine spoke again, smearing the half-dried tears off her face with the heels of