willow. Each wall had a gate in the middle, flanked by log towers and guarded by a full company. Sentries patrolled the perimeter, and the rest of the men were hard at work. Four broad streets met in a central square for the command tent and unit standard shrines, and working parties were grading them, laying a pavement of cobbles and pounding it down, cutting drainage ditches along a gridwork throughout the camp. Orderly rows of leather tents were up, the standard eight-man issue for each squad; picket lines set out for the draught animals; deep latrines dug; even a bathhouse erected. Smiths and leatherworkers and armorers were already hard at work, repairing equipment and preparing for the siege works.
Demansk felt a surge of pride; this whole great city, this expression of human will and intelligence and capacity for order and civilization, was the casual daily accomplishment of a Confed army. If they were ordered to move, they'd take it all down before breakfast muster-no use presenting an enemy with a fortress-and do the same again the next evening after a full day's march. And if they were here for a couple of months, it would be a city in truth-paved streets, sewers, stone buildings.
Then he turned and looked at Preble.
'Sir!'
An aide came trotting up. 'Sir, Justiciar Demansk-we've got a. . a person, sir, who claims to have urgent news.'
Demansk's eyebrows went up towards the receding line of his close-cropped grizzled hair. 'A
'Claims to be a relative of yours, sir.' The aide's aristocratic features curled slightly in disdain. 'On the off chance that they might have some information I didn't have them whipped out of the camp, sir.'
The Justiciar lowered the hand he'd been shading his eyes with as he peered towards Preble. 'By all means, let's see this. . person. .' he said.
A small slight man came trotting up the log stairs of the tower, with an Islander woman at his heels.
This
Demansk's eyes went wide. 'Helga!' he said. . almost sputterings.
'Father!'
* * *
'What are they doing?' Enry Sharbonow said, squinting.
'They're getting ready to build a causeway,' Esmond said. He pointed. 'See, they've got a good hard-surfaced road right down to the water's edge. They've almost certainly got local pilots and fishermen who can tell them exactly what the shoals are like. Now they're starting. See those lines of log pilings, a hundred yards apart? Those mark the edges. Between them, they've got working parties, their troops and whatever civilians they can round up, unloading those oxcarts full of rock-boulders, up to sixty pounds. See how they're passing them hand to hand? They'll pile those up until they get above the surface, compact them, then cover with a layer of smaller rock. By the time it's safely above high-tide level, they'll have a section of first-class paved road.'
Enry swallowed. A little beyond him Prince Tenny lounged with elaborate unconcern, nibbling on a honeyed fig and fingering a set of healing scratches along one side of his bearded face.
'And those wooden things they're building, a little further back?'
'Well, that's a little far to see, but I'd say they're probably siege engines. Catapults, of course, heavy ones. Siege towers-wooden fort towers on wheels, covered in hides or possibly metal plates, so they can roll them up to our walls and climb protected. Solophonic ladders-big counterweighted things like a covered bridge on a pivot, sort of the same thing. Fire raisers. Metal-shod battering rams under heavy roofs, also on wheels, for forcing a breach. When they get the causeway close enough, they'll use the catapults and archers to keep our heads down while they complete it-batter a hole in the wall, if they can. If they can't, they'll roll the Solophons and siege towers up to the wall and storm it, while the battering rams knock sections of it down and make ramps for their assault troops.'
Enry's natural olive skin had gone very pale, a sort of doughy white color. 'What are we going to
Esmond took a fig from the silver tray being held up for Tenny, popped it into his mouth and chewed with relish. 'Oh, there are a few tricks we can try,' he said cheerfully, and cocked an eye at the sky. 'No moons tonight.'
* * *
'You shouldn't be here,' Esmond hissed into the darkness.
'Neither should you,' Adrian said.
'Sirs, with respect, shut the fuck up,' Donnuld Grayn said, pausing as he tightened the strap on a greave. 'We're getting close.'
At least, that was what the Preblean scouts had said, swimming in after sculling across the strait on inflated sheepskins. None of them had been caught, so either the Confeds were extremely confident or fiendishly clever at misdirection.
Esmond showed teeth, white in the darkness against skin covered with burnt cork.
'I'll show them fiendish,' he whispered, chuckling, and looked back along the boat.
It was about thirty feet long, the Preblean sailors at the muffled oars, the men his own Strikers with some of Adrian's specialists for luck. That dampened his mood, slightly. He might have known that Adrian wouldn't send his men along and not go himself; he wasn't a professional, but he thought like one, sometimes-as if soldiers' ghosts were whispering in his ear.
That checked him for a moment.
'Row off,' the Preblean at the tiller oar said softly. 'Row soft, all. . raise oars and let her glide.
The high timber wall of the causeway's edge loomed ahead of them. The Confeds had driven the logs into the sand and mud of the channel bed at an angle, slanting outwards. That made it easier to climb as the boat came alongside; he leapt, got a grip, swarmed upwards. Rope nooses flew up from his and the other boats, but Esmond ignored them as he poised crouching at the top. According to the scouts' reports, the sentry ought to be. .