Against the Tide of Years (57 page)

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Authors: S. M. Stirling

BOOK: Against the Tide of Years
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Ian Arnstein looked over at the dredgers as they chewed their way through the soil of Kar-Duniash.
Symbolic,
he thought.
Undermining foundations is turning out to be our stock-in-trade.
“ I don’t understand, man,” the blacksmith said.
His shop was cluttered with work, mostly the finer ornamental type of wrought iron in various stages of completion. Walker lounged back against the doorpost; it was
hot
in there, with two big hearths and three smaller ones. All of them were glowing with coke fires, made from Istrian coal.
Work’s kept him in good shape, though,
Walker thought. Especially for a man in his fifties, now. His son was a nine-year-old miniature of his father, without the little granny glasses; he’d been proudly pounding on a miniature anvil until the king and his guardsmen arrived.
“I’m retiring you, John,” Walker said patiently. He smiled like a wolf at the spurt of fear in the blacksmith’s sad russet-colored eyes.
Well, he’s learned his lesson.
“ No, no, nothing nasty,” Walker laughed. “ I’m just letting you retire. You’ve taught my people everything you know, and I don’t trust you enough to put you in an executive job. So you’re history here.”
“ You’re letting us
go,
man? ” the Californian said incredulously.
“Not back to Nantucket, of course. You know too much. Otherwise, yes, anywhere in the kingdom—provided you let me know. Hell, I’ll throw in a land grant up in the hills if you want; you always were into that organic gardening horseshit, weren’t you? And a pension.”
Martins put the hammer down on his twister anvil and drank a dipperful of water from a bucket. “Yeah. Well, thanks, man. I’d like to get out of town, yeah. It ain’t the best place in the world to bring up kids.”
“Afraid they’ll get contaminated, eh? ” Walker laughed. He pushed himself upright. “If you get tired of rusticating, you can move back here. I’ll even reserve a place in the guard regiment for your little Sam here, if he wants it.”
Martins’s face tightened in mulish stubbornness. Walker was still laughing as he walked out to the waiting carriage. John-taunting was an old sport. Not his favorite, but he’d miss it, in a way.
“Lord,” Ohotolarix said in the bright sun outside. “A runner from the palace. Gla has fallen.”
“Good news!” Walker said. That was the last rebel stronghold in Boetia, up by Lake Copais. “That leaves Thessaly, and once we’ve shown them the error of their ways, we’re recovered from my late lamented father-in-law’s flying leap.”
Ohotolarix shuddered slightly. Walker could see his thoughts:
The sacrifice of a chief is powerful magic.
Too many others had thought so too, and it had set his plans back a year or more. Still, he wasn’t in
that
much of a hurry.
He climbed into the open-sided carriage and signaled the driver. Iron-shod hooves clattered on the stone pavement, and the vehicle pulled away, with six mounted guards on either side. Walker linked his hands behind his head, blinking up into the cloud-speckled sky, humming.
 
“Oh, Jesus!” Kenneth Hollard said, feeling an almost irresistible impulse to cover his eyes and scream.
Raupasha was riding a horse around the exercise circle of Ur Base; she looked up and waved at him, smiling brightly. He had expected to see her in the saddle, since he’d given orders that she be allowed to train in riding. He hadn’t expected to see her taking her retrained chariot pony over the obstacle course. She was laughing as she cantered, collecting the horse with rein and knees. It leaped, and she shifted her weight easily as it came down, leaning back slightly to steady it.
Oh, thank you, Jesus,
Hollard thought, breathing again, as visions of falls and broken necks fled. At least she hadn’t tried it with her reins knotted and arms crossed, the way officers and scouts had to.
“ Lord Kenn’et!” she said, guiding her mount over to the adobe wall that surrounded the practice yard.
A grinning noncom took her bridle. “ Not bad, Princess,” he said.
The troops were making something of a mascot of her—the news of who’d killed the king of Assyria had spread quickly, and the story of her rescue was suitably romantic.
Her looks don’t hurt either,
he thought. She was wearing Marine khakis, her long black hair was tied back in a ponytail, and her cheeks were flushed with fresh air and exercise.
“How is the princess doing? ” he asked the Marine instructor.
“Not bad, sir. Good sense of balance, and she knew horses already.”
Raupasha nodded as she swung down from the saddle. “Horses . . .” A pause while she searched for English words. “Horses part of . . . family.”
Her accent was thick, but he was impressed with the progress she’d made in languages, too. Sabala was twining around her ankles, looking up with
notice-me-please
body language and wiggling even harder when she reached down to pat him. In the Akkadian they shared she went on:
“ We had a few old chariot ponies on the estate—as old as me, or almost; the Assyrians didn’t want any of the old
mariannu
families to have teams. Sometimes we’d hitch them up and I’d drive, with my foster father teaching me.” A smile. “ While I was in the chariot, I was a Great King like Tushratta, in the days when Egypt itself feared Mitanni.”
A cloud passed over her face for a moment, the gray eyes darkening. “My foster father was a good man; perhaps he indulged me too much—treating me like the son his lord had wished and hoped for.” Then she smiled again. “It is good to see you again, Lord Kenn’et. The gods send you good fortune.”
“And you, Princess. They
have
sent us good fortune, as a matter of fact. Our . . .”
I don’t think “commodore” has a precise equivalent,
he thought. “Our war commander has arrived safely back in Nantucket.”
She put a hand on his sleeve. “ That is good to hear, Lord Kenn’et. We have never met, but I owe this Marian-Alston also a great debt; and your . . .
Chief
”—she used the English term—“Jared-Cofflin also.”
And you can pronounce their names better than mine,
Hollard noted absently; nobody in this area could handle the
th
at the end of “Kenneth.”
They turned and walked back from the stable complex along one wall of the base toward the central square and the command buildings. Ur Base was less crowded now, with most of the troops up north and most of the basic construction finished. However, there were still plenty of locals around, hired to work or sent to learn, and the streets were thick with wagons and carts. The guards at the entrance to the praetorium brought their rifles up to present arms as he passed, and he returned their salutes.
“Shall we play the chess again, Lord Kenn’et?” Raupasha asked gently.
Quick at picking up moods, this girl,
Hollard thought. The went to his office and set out the board; there were plenty of board games here, but no others quite like this one.
“ You are troubled,” she said after a while.
He started out of his concentration and looked at the board.
I win in five moves,
he thought. He was a fair-to-middling player; the Arnsteins beat him like a drum, but he’d improved a good deal since he started playing with them. Raupasha had natural talent; she thought ahead and didn’t have trouble holding different alternatives in her head.
“ Yes,” he said.
“ Why are you troubled, Lord Kenn’et? ” she said.
“ I’m a little . . . uneasy,” he said. “ I promised you protection—”
“And you have given it,” she said.
Hollard sighed. “Well, they’re talking about asking you to do something for us,” he said. “ I’m not sure how compatible it is with what I promised you.”
“You are a man of honor,” she said firmly. “What is it that they—the lord Arnstein and his lady?—plan? ”
“ They want to put you on the throne of Mitanni,” he said bluntly after a long pause. There was no way to sugarcoat it.
The olive face went pale, and her hands gripped the table until moons of white and pink showed in her nails. Her voice was calm when she went on: “ Tell me more, Lord Kenn’et.”
“ You’d be a tributary of Babylon.” That meant more or less a client state, in local terms.
She nodded. “ I understand, Lord Kenn’et. King Shuriash must see to his own land’s welfare. He could not afford to see Mitanni rise as it once was, or we too would be a threat.”
She looked down at the table. “ I am not . . . not sure if such a thing can be. We do not—did not—shut women of rank away like animals, as the Assyrians do. Yet we have no tradition of ruling queens. Do you Eagle People? ”
“ We don’t have kings,” he said.
She nodded; he’d explained how the Republic worked, although she’d found it stranger than atoms or germs. He continued: “But we don’t bar any post to a woman. The question is, though, how
your
people would regard it. The whole object of this—from our point of view—is to find some way of bringing peace to the river district. The Arnsteins think that your people, the Hurrians there, would accept anyone connected with your old royal house, because they hated the Assyrians so.”
Raupasha leaned her chin on a palm, her feathery-black brows coming together in a frown of thought. “ That may be so. But the walls of the kingdom”—he puzzled at that and then realized she meant something like “structure of the state”—“were beaten into dust. Rebuilding them would be a long work.”
“We’d help,” Hollard said. “What we need most right away is an end to internal fighting and help with our war on Walker.”
Abruptly Raupasha smiled, then laughed. It was an infectious urchin grin. “Right now, Lord Kenn’et, my sovereign majesty is such that I can’t even stop Sabala from piddling on your floor.”
“Goddam!” Hollard said. He was laughing himself as he picked the puppy up and headed for the door.
 
The third man staggered off with a small shriek; he’d have been screaming louder if he’d had the breath for it. His two predecessors were lying on the ground, one vomiting weakly, the other spluttering and beginning to regain consciousness as one of his friends flipped water in his face from a canteen.
The gathered Babylonians she was supposed to train in modern infantry tactics were watching her with round eyes; not many had seen one of the Eagle People before at close range. She’d offered a thousand pieces of silver and a chariot to anyone who could pin her shoulders to the ground. Experience had shown it was best to get the bull-baboon macho nonsense out of the way right off.
And none of them have seen the Empty Hand in action before,
Kathryn Hollard thought grimly, wiping the blood off her skinned knuckles.
I am getting
so
tired of having to beat truths into these brainless dickheads before they’ll
listen
to me
.
There were about a hundred of them, and they were supposed to function as cadre for the First Kar-Duniash Infantry. They were dressed in a local version of Islander uniform, pants and shirt and jacket, although the color was earth-brown rather than khaki proper. All of them were young and fit, which was helpful, and all of “good family,” which was something of a drawback.
We should have started with peasants; at least they’re used to doing what they’re told,
she thought.
“That should settle the question of whether it hurts your honor to serve under a woman,” she said dryly. “Any more volunteers? ”
A vigorous shaking of heads. “ Now your prince will address you.”
Kashtiliash’s chariot drew up; he was in the same uniform, with a few additional touches—gold scales on the shoulders, for instance. Their eyes met for an instant, and one of the Kassite’s eyelids drooped in a suspicion of a wink as he inclined his head toward the injured men.
Well,
he
knows what I’m thinking
. Kathryn fought down her grin.
I think I’m falling in love. Christ, I’m an idiot. And I don’t give a damn.
“Men of Kar-Duniash,” he said. “ You have been chosen to be first to receive the fire-weapons of our allies. This is a great honor to you and your kindred.” The young men perked up at that. Honor meant fame, not to mention estates and gifts. “ In your hands will be the fire-weapons that swept the hosts of Asshur aside like sheep and ground the walls of their cities into dust.”
A cheer broke out, and Kashtiliash raised a hand. “Cheer not! Here you will work, under the orders of the great warrior Kat’ryn-Hollard, who fought with me against the Assyrians and cut down assassins as they strove to end my life. He who does not obey, does not toil, on him will the wrath of the king descend. Hear and obey!”
The recruits went on their bellies, and Kashtiliash continued in the same vein for a while. She grimaced slightly; it would take something like this to get the scions of the kingdom’s noble families doing what they were told, but generations of Yankees rose up in her blood at the sight.

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