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CHAPTER TEN

It was dark, with the sun down and only Miniluna in the sky. The earth gave back the day’s heat, radiating from the bare clay of the badlands in the Drangosh bend; the darkness turned the ochers and umbers of the canyons to a uniform gray. Pterosauroids cheeped and mewed overhead, swooping after night-flying insects; Raj caught a gleam from the huge round eye of one, a vagrant trace of starlight. Earth-descended bats passed more silently. Off in the tangle of gullies and sinkholes something roared on a rising note, ending in a pierced-boiler screech; there was a rattle along the lines of dogs as the big animals raised their heads and cocked ears toward it. Some carnosauroid; they were hard to eliminate, in any area without a dense population, and the Civil Government force was into the belt of uncultivated land that extended from just west of Ain el-Hilwa along the river north to the border.

Raj sat, wrapping his officer’s cloak around his shoulders and looking up at the stars that stretched in a thick frosted band across the sky. The Stars where man had once dwelt, before the Fall—and would again, if Center’s plan succeeded.

The unFallen had the powers of gods, Raj thought. Yet from what Center tells me, they were still men—not sinless, as the Church teaches. They had their wars and their intrigues, as we do; their tragedies and defeats, as we do.

true, the voice in his mind said. my analysis is that such are inherent in the nature of your species.

Raj leaned back against the clay and lit a cheroot. What’s the point, then? he asked. If all I’m doing is letting people make mistakes on a bigger scale and a broader canvas?

Center was silent for half a minute. this is a difficult question, and one at the limits of my powers of analysis. i was not constructed so as to be capable of philosophical doubt.

Another pause. in your terms: the fall represented a limitation of human choice due to suboptimal decisions. the greater capacities of a unified and technologically advanced civilization free humans from the determinism of nature. both their triumphs and their failures become matters of choice.

Ours aren’t?

only to a very limited degree. the vast majority of humans on bellevue are peasants, because you lack the productive capacity to organize yourselves otherwise. this precludes forms of government and social organization less authoritarian, because the civilized regions depend too heavily on coercion to produce the surplus on which cities and a literate leisure class depend. if the fall continues, even agriculture-based societies will collapse and maximum entropy will be reached at a hunter-gatherer level. the survival of human life on this planet will then be in doubt.

As if to illustrate the point, the carnosauroid’s retching scream sounded again through the night.

a new civilization may eventually emerge; but it will lack any continuity with the ancestral culture. and fifteen thousand years of savagery means hundreds of generations of human lives without the opportunity to exercise their capacities.

Raj nodded. Peasants were old at forty, and every day in their lives was pretty much the same, except when something went badly wrong. The Church said it was punishment for men’s sins—which seemed to be literally true in Center’s terms as well—but there was no reason for the punishment to go on forever.

He shivered slightly, despite the warmth of the earth at his back. The fate of the human race for the next fifteen millennia rests on me, then. And our chances of pulling it off are no better than even.

correct.

He stood and flicked the stub out into the darkness, a solitary ember that arced away and was lost in the night. He turned. Behind him the command group was gathering about the pool of light cast by a kerosene lantern, the undershadow putting the bones of their faces into hard relief. They were unfolding maps, munching on hardtack and pieces of jerked meat; their smiles and eyes looked as feral as so many war-dogs in the yellow light.

“Well, sooner started, sooner finished,” Raj said. He strode into the light. “Right, gentlemen. Tewfik’s main force is rather smaller than I’d expected—about sixteen thousand men, according to Captain M’lewis’s report.”

“Countin’ banners, sir. Couldna’ git closer. Them wogs is screened tighter ‘n a cherry inna raghead’s hareem.”

Everyone nodded. Colonial units were less standardized in number than their Civil Government equivalents. One reason for that was a deliberate attempt to make it harder for observers to get a quick, accurate tally of a Colonial army’s numbers by counting the unit standards.

“We’ll take sixteen thousand as a ballpark figure—which worries me, Messers. We’re here” —he put his finger on a spot west of Ain el-Hilwa— “and we have to cut the bend of the Drangosh to get back to our bridgehead opposite Sandoral. I hope you all realize that after leaving Ali’s main army—”

He moved his finger to the west bank, and north almost to Sandoral, then south again to the Colonial pontoon bridge.

“—he could have dropped forces off to cross the river and take up blocking positions north of us.”

By their expressions, the thought was an unpleasant surprise to a few of the battalion commanders—although not to his Companions.

“That depends on Tewfik’s estimate of our numbers and intentions. We’ll let the men rest another hour, then start out at Maxiluna rise.” With both moons in the sky, there would be more than enough light for riding. “We’ll make use of every hour of darkness we can; it’ll be cooler, too.

“Colonel Staenbridge,” he went on, “you take the three companies of the 5th and lead the way. Spread out but move fast. Captain M’lewis, you’ll be the scout screen for the scout screen. Gerrin, if you run into anything you think you can handle, punch through. If not, go around if that’s possible, screening our retreat. Major Zahpata, you and your 18th Komar will follow in column of march right behind. Exercise normal caution, but rely on Colonel Staenbridge for your intelligence. Gerrin, if you run into anything you can’t handle, Major Zahpata is to move up immediately and support the 5th at your direction. Understood?”

Both men nodded. At least I don’t have to wonder who’ll take orders from whom, Raj thought thankfully. That sort of thing had nearly gotten him killed in the Southern Territories campaign, at the hands of the late unlamented Major Dalhousie. The problem was that the Civil Government didn’t have permanent field armies or a structure above the battalion level—large concentrated field forces were too tempting to ambitious generals. By now, all these men had been on campaign with him long enough to work smoothly together, and he’d disposed of the purblind idiots, one way or another.

“The rest of you will be following in double column up these roads,” he said, tracing the route northwest with two strokes of his finger. “They’re never more than a kilometer apart, so you’ll be close enough for mutual support. If Colonel Staenbridge runs into a major block-force, you’ll flank and go round—taking a lick at them from the rear in passing. Boot their arse, don’t pee on them; we cannot afford to get tangled up in a meeting engagement.”

“My oath no,” Staenbridge said mildly, still studying the map. “Not with Tewfik and sixteen thousand wogs after our buttocks.”

“Exactly.”

“What’s the source of our intelligence on these pathways through the badlands?” Zahpata asked.

Raj had drawn those in himself. “Personal sources, Major. You may rely on them.” Center can do more with my eyes than I can, he added silently.

“Major Gruder, I have a special tasking for your command. Otherwise, the order of march will be as follows—”

When the other officers dispersed to their units, Raj lead Kaltin Gruder out into the mouth of the notch.

“Kaltin, I want you to execute a battalion ambush on Tewfik’s lead elements here,” he said.

Gruder squinted up at the eroded clay hills, comparing them with his memory of the same scene by daylight. “Good ground,” he said. “And we’ve given them a couple of bloody noses—he’ll be more cautious this time.”

“Probably. Time is exactly what I want you to gain; but not at the price of your battalion. Understood?”

Gruder nodded. Raj went on: “Tewfik knows he has two ways to win this campaign. The quick way is to catch us and smash us up before we get back to Sandoral. He’s got numerical superiority, but it’d still be expensive. On the other hand, a quick victory is always preferable; the sooner you win, the less time the other side has to come up with something tricky. The slow way is to chase us back into Sandoral and starve us out. So he’ll probably be willing to take a swipe at you to save time, but it won’t be a reckless one.”

Raj reached a space of flat sand, coarse outwash detritus from the bluffs above. He smoothed it further with his boot and drew his sword to sketch in it.

“This is your position. More or less of a very broad V, with the open end facing south. Have your men dig rifle pits at the foot of these hills; I’ll detail the City of Delrio to help before they pull out. Scatter the dirt, and it’ll be difficult for them to estimate your numbers before they get close. I suggest you place them by companies like this.” He traced lines. “With your dogs reasonably close to hand, here and along here. I’ll also have the Delrio leave you their splatguns—that’ll give you eight total. Put them down here—here—here—here, in pairs.”

His sword marked spots along the face of the V. Gruder frowned.

“Down on the flat?”

“They’re not artillery, Kaltin—those are bullets they’re shooting, not shells.”

Gruder nodded thoughtfully; a bullet was dangerous all along its trajectory if it was fired at a formation with any depth. Fired from above, it either hit the target it was aimed at or plunked harmlessly into the dirt; fired on the level, it went much farther.

“That’ll give you crossfire from both infantry and splatguns, like this.” The tip of Raj’s saber traced X marks across the sand.

“Now,” he went on, moving the sword to left and right on either side of the notch, “this terrain is pretty well impassable to formed bodies of troops. Certainly to artillery. Put observers here and here. Tewfik may try to work dismounted troopers around your flanks in those areas. If he does, block them with your reserve company—it ought to be easy, in that ground.

“Over here, about twenty klicks, is the only other path suitable for artillery and large formations of troops. That’s where he’ll go when he decides he can’t just rush you out. Put a relay of men between here and there; when his flanking force gets there, pull out.”

He raised his head and met the other man’s eyes, his own flat and hard. “I give you no discretion concerning that. When his men reach there, you bug out. Understood?”

Si, mi heneral,” Gruder said. He grinned. “I have learned something over the past five years.”

“I certainly hope so, because I can’t spare you or your battalion,” Raj said.

“Hmmm. Artillery here?” Kaltin’s saber pointed to the apex of the V.

“Yes, and start the guns out first. Also, walk all that ground tonight, and have your company commanders do it too. Ranging marks, all the bells and whistles.”

“Si.” Kaltin studied the improvised sand-table. “I’ll have them come and look at this, too. You have a good memory for terrain, mi heneral.

Which was true, and even more so with Center’s assistance. “Waya con Ispirito del Homme,” Raj said. They gripped forearms. “Get me an extra half-day.”

“The Spirit with you also, General. Consider it done.”

Tewfik ibn’Jamal, Amir of the Host of Peace, lowered his binoculars and cursed. Arabic was the finest of all languages for that, as for all else—as would be expected for the language God chose to dictate His word in—but the rolling, guttural obscenities did not relieve his feelings.

“And may the fleas of a thousand mangy feral dogs infest the scrotum of the kaphar general Whitehall,” he concluded.

Ahead was a broad slope five thousand meters across at its mouth, narrowing down to barely a hundred where the roadway snaked into the badlands. The hills behind and to either side were not high, but they were steep as the sides of houses, crumbly adobe scored and riven by the rare cloudbursts of the Drangosh Valley winter. The roadway was graded dirt—a secondary road. The main highway—Allah torment in the flames of Eblis the souls of the engineers who laid it out—ran parallel to the Ghor Canal, through the populated districts farther east and towards Ain el-Hilwa. That town of fools and dotards.

Taking that would mean two days’ delay, more than enough time for the invaders to scuttle back to the walls of Sandoral—and take any hope of concluding this accursed war quickly with them.

Another tabor of dismounted troopers trotted up into the V, angling for the enemy’s foremost position on that side—if they could dislodge the outer rim, they could unravel it up the foot of the hills. A steady braaaap . . . braaaap sounded, and men fell. Figures in crimson djellabas dropped into the hot white dust of the valley floor, to lie still or twitching and moaning. He could see puffs of dust where the bullets struck, smoke pouring from the positions of the new rapid-fire weapons, a steady crackle and bang from the rifle-pits where the infidel troopers kept up a continuous hail of well-aimed fire. A pom-pom galloped up to support the soldiers.

The rapid-fire weapons from both sides of the V shifted to it. The dogs of its team went down in a tangle, and the gun’s long slender barrel slewed around in futility. He watched a survivor drag a wounded comrade into its shelter. Bullets fell on it like a rain of hail to ricochet off in sparks and whining fragments.

In the gun-line directly before him crews heaved at the trails of 70mm field guns and pom-poms. More smoke billowed out as they fired, a ripple of red tongues of fire from left to right. Dirt fountained skyward along the enemy lines, and a spare team was galloped out to retrieve the pom-pom and the wounded.

“Can you not suppress those Shaitan-inspired weapons?” he asked.

His artillery chief shrugged unwillingly. “Insh’allah,” he said. “Amir, whatever they are, they do not recoil as artillery pieces do—so they can be deeply dug in. All we see is the muzzle and the top of an iron shield. To make good practice we must draw close—and you saw the result of that. Also they have a battery of field guns above, with a two-hundred-meter advantage in height. If I push our gun line forward, they will come under artillery fire from the heights as they try to deploy, as well as from small arms.”

“Move guns to the left, concentrate on the outer arm of the enemy defenses.”

“As the Amir commands,” the gunner said.

Tewfik turned back to the map table. Sweat dripped from the points of his beard onto the thick paper, reminding him of how thirsty he was. The goatskin chaggal at his side was half-empty; his men’s would be worse, and there was no source of good water sufficient for fifteen thousand men within a half-day’s ride.

“Muhammed,” he said, and one of his officers bowed. “Sound the recall.”

“Another push and we will be through, Amir,” the man said stubbornly.

“Another push and we will lose another hundred men dead,” Tewfik said. Just then a pair of stretcher bearers trotted by. Their burden moaned and tried to brush at the flies crawling on the ruin of his face. “Or like that. I do not continue with a plan that has failed.”

“I obey.”

“And start men moving here.” He traced a line to the eastward on the map. “The going’s passable for men on foot. Put some of those Bedouin hunters to use; the sand-thieves do nothing but sit on their arses and eat better men’s food. They should know the footpaths. Work around toward the rear of the enemy position.

“Anwar,” he went on. “You will take the reserve brigade and go” —he moved the finger in a looping circle far to the west— “twenty kilometers. A tertiary road—passable for wheels, according to the reports. Push all the way through to open country on the other side of these badlands, secure the route, and I will follow. Mutasim, you will put a blocking force across the mouth of this deathtrap; I’ll leave you thirty guns. When the kaphar pull out, pursue, slow them if you can; we’ll see if whoever Whitehall left in charge has sense enough to flee quickly as we flank him.”

Mutasim scowled. “So far we have accomplished little,” he said, tugging at his beard.

“There is no God but God; all things are accomplished according to the will of God,” Tewfik said. He fought the urge to grind his teeth. “We were sent to stop the enemy’s ravaging of our land; this we have done. We will pursue him. If we catch him, we will destroy him; if not, we will besiege him in Sandoral, which has not the supplies to support his men for long. In a week, they must begin to eat their dogs—which destroys all hope of mobility. After that, it is merely a matter of time. This was a damaging raid, no more. Insh’allah.”

“As God wills,” the others echoed.

“Go. Move swiftly.”

The officers departed, and trumpets began to sound. Only the aides, messengers, and the Amir’s personal mamluks were left, silently awaiting his will. Tewfik stood and stared up the valley again, unconsciously fingering his eyepatch. It had never stopped him seeing into the heart and mind of an enemy commander before. Whitehall, Whitehall, what is your plan? What dream of victory do you cherish in your secret heart?

That was what bothered him. He remembered the El Djem campaign; he’d caught Whitehall there, beaten him—although the fighting retreat had been stubbornly effective, preventing him from finishing the young kaphar commander off without paying a price that seemed excessive. He’d bitterly regretted that decision a year later, when the Colony’s forces met Whitehall’s army.

May the Merciful, the Lovingkind, have pity on your soul, my father, he thought. Jamal had been a hard man and a good Settler, but no great general. You ordered that we attack directly into the kaphar guns, and we paid for it, Tewfik thought bitterly. Jamal had paid with his head, the House of Islam with thousands of its best troops and a legacy of civil war. All Whitehall’s doing; it had been a good day’s work for Shaitan when Whitehall had been born among the infidels of the House of War instead of a believer.

Since then Whitehall had made war in the West, while Tewfik repaired the Host of Peace and prepared for the next round of battle. This time there should be no doubt about the outcome. He had overwhelming numbers, and even Ali wasn’t going to force him into the sort of error their father had made.

Yet the Faithful had good intelligence sources in the western realms. Tewfik had followed Whitehall’s campaigns closely, and spoken with eyewitnesses. Why this raid? By bringing his force out from beyond Sandoral’s walls, Whitehall had exposed them to the risk of defeat—without any countervailing chance of decisive victory. True, he had ravaged rich lands; true, he had inflicted stinging tactical reverses on the Muslims. Our losses were greater than his. But we can absorb them without strategic consequence, and he knows this. Nor were burnt-out villages in this one little corner of the Settler’s domains any sort of strategic loss; yes, a tragedy for those who suffered, and enough to wake screams of rage from the nobles whose estates were ravaged, but nothing mortal. At least once in the past kaphar hosts had ravaged their way to the walls of Al Kebir itself, and the House of Islam still stood—there were vast and rich lands south and east of the capital to draw on. This was nothing by comparison.

Whitehall must have something in mind, something decisive. But what?

Tewfik plucked at his beard again. “He threw as many troops as he could into Sandoral before we reached the walls,” he muttered to himself. “Yet it would have been better to send one-third as many, and use the other trains for supplies.” Sending all the civilians out of the fortress city had been a shrewd move, but not enough. And why so many cavalry, when the issue would be settled by fighting from behind strong works?

“He has too many troops to hold the walls, and not enough food to feed the numbers he brought—yet not enough men to meet us in the field.”

Three pounds of food per man per day, fifteen per dog; Whitehall knew the importance of logistics as well as any man. What was his plan?

There was something else here, something beyond a young kaphar chieftain with a genius for war. The infidels whispered that their false god rode at Whitehall’s elbow.

He shrugged off the notion. There was no God but God. “Insh’allah,” he said again, snapping his binoculars back into the case at his waist. “We waste no more time.”


“Hadelande!”

Robbi M’Telgez pulled the rifle free from the scabbard and kicked his feet free of the stirrups. Dirt clouted the soles of his boots as Pochita crouched; he turned and ran up the crumbly slope, coughing in the dust Company A kicked up in their scramble. He chopped the butt of his rifle into the dirt to help the traction, feeling the dirt sticking to the sweat on his face, blinking his eyes against the sting and thanking the Spirit for the chain-mail avental riveted to the back of his helmet. It might or might not turn a swordstroke, but the leather backing of the mail protected your neck from the sun pretty good.

Captain Foley reached the top and his bannerman planted the company pennant. The officer stood with arm—hook arm—and sword outstretched, to give the alignment. M’Telgez flopped down on his belly and crawled the last three paces to the ridgeline, because bullets were already cracking overhead. Got guts, that one, he thought.

Foley stayed erect until the unit was in place, then went to one knee only a little back from the crest. Some men in other units gave them a hard time for having the colonel’s boyfriend as company commander. He didn’t care weather Foley banged men, women, bitch-dogs or sheep—as long as he knew his business, which he did.

There were plenty of wogs making for the same crestline from the other side, hundreds of them. The slope was steeper there, though; he could see clumps of them falling back in miniature avalanches of rocks and clay, down to where their dogs milled about in the dry streambed below. Others were prone on the slope, firing at the Civil Government banners that had appeared on the ridge above. M’Telgez flipped up the ladder sight mounted just ahead of the block of his Armory rifle and clicked the aperture up to 800 meters.

“Pick your targets!” the ensign in command of his platoon shouted.

He did, a wog with fancywork on his robe walking around at the base of the hill and followed by signalers. A long shot, and tricky from up here, but he had the ground for a firm rest. He worked the rifle into the dirt, fingers light on the forestock, and took up the first tension on the trigger.

“Fwego!”

BAM. Eighty rifles fired. The butt punched his shoulder; a measurable fraction of a second later the wog in the fancy robe folded sideways under the hammering impact of the heavy 11mm bullet. He fell, kicking. Not goin’ t’git up, neither, M’Telgez thought. Not with a hollowpoint round blowing a tunnel the size of a fist through his stomach and intestines. The Descotter whistled tunelessly through his teeth as he worked the lever and reloaded, the spent brass tinkling away down the slope to his rear. Most of the others had picked closer targets; bodies were sliding back down the steep slope. Live ones, too, as the more sensible wogs decided that toiling slowly up a forty-degree slope of crumbling dirt under fire wasn’t the way to a long life.

BAM. He picked another hard target, a Colonial prone behind a slight ridge and firing back. The djellaba blended well with the clay, but he aimed up a little. The wog jerked up seconds later, clawing at his back. Lever, reload.

“Five rounds, independent fire, rapid, fwego.”

M’Telgez’s hand went back to his pouch; he pulled four bullets out of the loops and stuck their tips between his lips like cigarettes. Another went into the chamber, and he snapped the ladder-sight back down to the ramp.

Damn. There were too many wogs who’d decided to chance it. Bam. One down. Out one of the rounds between his lips. Bam. A miss, but the target yelled and danced sideways. Bam. Head shot, and the spiked helmet went end-over-end downslope in a splash of blood and brains. Bam. Couldn’t tell, smoke too thick. Bam.

The oncoming enemy wavered, then fell back; most of them turned over onto their backsides and tobogganed down the slope, controlling the slide with their feet. There were boulders and rocks enough at the bottom to take cover behind, if they were careful.

“Dig in!”

The order came down the line. M’Telgez cursed; like most cavalry troopers, he hated digging—back home in Descott, a vakaro resented any sort of work that couldn’t be done from the saddle. Resignedly, he spoke to his squad:

“Even numbers! Odd numbers on overwatch. C’mon, lads, ‘tain’t yer dicks yer grabbin’, put yer backs inta it.”

He reached to the back of his webbing belt and undid the leather pouch that held the head of his entrenching tool. It was a mattock-and-pick if you put the head in the central hole, a shovel if you put it into the slot behind the broader section. He unhooked the wooden handle that hung from his belt by the bayonet on his left side and knocked it into the main hole. A few swift blows cut through the hard crust of the adobe; it came up in chunks, and he piled those and handy rocks ahead of him, working down the slope behind to make a cut that would let him lie comfortably and fire through a couple of notches.

The afternoon was savagely hot, and the sweat ran down his body in rivulets that he could feel collecting where his shirt and jacket met the webbing belt. The damp cotton drill cloth clung and chafed. A carbine bullet went by overhead now and then with a malignant wasp-whine, encouraging him. A man came by with extra ammunition slung in canvas bandoliers from the pack-dogs; M’Telgez snagged an extra fifty rounds and cut a notch to support them with a few quick strokes of the mattock.

“M’Telgez! Report to the captain!”

Shit. Jest whin I wuz gettin’ comfortable, loik, the corporal thought resignedly. “Smeet, y’got it fer now. Don’t fook up too bad, will yer?”

“We’ll a’ git kilt, but it’ll na be my fault, corp,” the older trooper said cheerfully.

M’Telgez wiped his hands on the swallowtails of his jacket and picked up his rifle, then stepped-slid downhill a pace or two; running crouched, his head was below the ridgeline. The crunch of entrenching tools in the dirt marked his passage, and the steady crackle of fire from the alternate numbers keeping up harassment against the wogs. He also passed a few dead men; head and neck wounds were generally quickly fatal.

“Ser,” he said when he came to the company pennant.

Barton Foley braced his pad across his knee with the point of his hook and wrote. “You have the way back to battalion, Corporal?”

“Yesser,” M’Telgez answered.

He had a good eye for that sort of thing; and it was an officer’s job to remember what his men could do.

“Detail one man of your squad to accompany you, and take this to Colonel Staenbridge.”

No problemo, seyhor.” He’d take M’tennin, the lad was young, eager and a good shot. Smeet could handle the squad—he was a good junior NCO, when there was no booze around. Drunk, he didn’t know a sow from his sister or an officer from an asswipe.

“Verbally, add that we can handle it for the present but would appreciate reinforcements. Report back immediately with his reply—and watch out, there may be wogs in these ravines.”


M’tennin screamed.

M’Telgez took one look over his shoulder and clapped his heels to Pochita’s ribs. The thing already had the younger man’s shoulders in its jaws and one clawed foot hooked into his dog’s side, ripping downward in a shower of blood and fur and loops of pink-gray gut. Pochita needed no urging; she brought her hindpaws up between her front and leapt off in a bounding gallop, teeth bared, ears flat, and eyes rolled back, right down the narrow floor of the canyon. Her rider whipped his head around as something screeched behind him, a sound like a steam-whistle gone berserk.

He could smell its breath, like a freshly-opened tomb in hot weather. It was bipedal and longer than a war-dog, probably heavier, but it ran with a birdlike stride—lightly, on the toe-pads of its three-clawed feet, so lightly that the shotgun blast of dirt and stones spraying back from each impact was a surprise. The body was a dusty orange-yellow, striped irregularly with vivid black; the open mouth was mottled purple and crimson. Teeth the size of his fingers reached for him, and the clawed forefeet on either side. Behind it another much like it—hunter’s reflex told him they were probably a mated pair—was tearing at the bodies of M’tennin and his mount with impartial gluttony. Its muzzle went skyward, the long narrow jaws dislocating as it swallowed a leg and hip.

“Hingada tho!” M’Telgez screamed. “Fuck ye!” The carnosauroid shrieked back at him, another carrion-scented blast.

His rifle was in the crook of his left arm. He snatched the pistol out of his boottop with his right and thrust it backward, not three meters from the thing’s mouth. Even so half the rounds missed. Three did hit; none of them seemed to do much good. A blood-fleck appeared on the shiny black skin between the angry red of the nostrils, and one fang shattered into fragments of ivory. That got the beast’s attention, at least; it spun sideways for an instant, snapping and rearing on one leg as the other slashed at whatever had struck it.

Then it realized he had hurt it. Some of the bigger carnosauroids were too dumb to do anything but kill and eat; the smaller agile ones like this could be a lot smarter. There was more than simple hunger in the cry it gave as it bounded after him once more, body horizontal and long slender tail snapping behind it at the tip like a bullwhip.

“Fuck me,” M’Telgez muttered through a dry mouth, and hurled the revolver at the beast. That hadn’t been such a good idea.

He leaned left and then right as Pochita took the curves of the narrow gully at dangerous speed. The carnosauroid didn’t let little things like turns slow it down; it just ran right up the wall of the cut, letting momentum keep it upright with its head parallel to the ground for an instant. The man wound the sling of his rifle around his right forearm with desperate speed. He’d have only one chance, and that wasn’t much with a single-shot rifle. Reloading at the gallop . . . he might as well try to fly like a pterosauroid by flapping his arms.

The sides of the gully opened out a little. The carnosauroid screamed again and speeded up, half-overtaking the fleeing human.

Right. Likes t’knock yer over afore it bites.

Normally holding the long Armory rifle out one-handed would have made M’Telgez’s arm tremble. Now it was steady, everything diamond-clear to his sight. Even the sideways lunge of the predator seemed fairly slow, an arc drawn through the air to meet the questing muzzle of his weapon.

Bam. The shock of recoil was a complete surprise, hard pain in his arm. The weight of the carnosauroid slammed into Pochita’s haunches, and the dog skittered in a three-sixty turn before resuming its gallop. The torque of the outflung rifle nearly dislocated M’Telgez’s shoulder, but the pain was negligible next to the horrifying knowledge that he’d failed. Footfalls still ripped the earth behind him, only a little further back—and Pochita’s tongue was hanging out in exhaustion.

He rounded another curve—

—and nearly ran into a screen of mounted men in blue jackets and round bowl-helmets. Their guns flicked up, but their eyes were behind him.

“Shoot, ye dickheads!” he screamed, as his dog braced its forelegs and sank down on its haunches to stop.

They didn’t. Bent over his pommel, gasping and wheezing, M’Telgez looked behind to see why.

The carnosauroid lay prone not five meters behind him, its muzzle plowing a furrow in the dry gritty dirt. One leg was outstretched and the other to the rear, as if it had done the splits in mid-stride. Tail and head beat the ground in an arrhythmic death-tattoo, then slumped into stillness. A neat hole drilled in the yellow scales just behind and above one ear-opening showed why.

“Well, fuck me,” M’Telgez mumbled again. It took three tries to return his rifle to the scabbard, and two to get his canteen open.

“There’s one’ll na try it, dog-brother,” one of the troopers said admiringly. Two rifles cracked as the corpse of the sauroid went through another bout of twitching, the jaws clashing with an ugly wet metallic sound. Carnosauroids took a good deal of killing.

A jingling and thump of paws sounded in the draw; the battalion standard came up. M’Telgez pulled himself erect with an effort and saluted.

“Colonel, message from C-captain Foley,” he said. “Ah, we’re, ah—”

“Take it easy, lad,” the Colonel said, not unkindly, looking at the dead predator and then at M’Telgez’s dog. “You had a close shave, there, Corporal.”

M’Telgez followed the lifted chin. Pochita’s tail was half-missing, ending in a bloody stump; now that the dog wasn’t running for its life it was trying to twist around and lick the injury. He dismounted and reached automatically into his saddlebags for ointment and bandages, a cavalry trooper’s reflex, and a lifelong vakaro’s.

One bite closer . . . he thought. The image must have been clear on his face, because the Colonel leaned down and clapped him on the shoulder.

“Good shot,” he said. “Anything with this?”

“Ah, t’Captain ‘uld want some reinforcements, loik,” M’Telgez said. In an effort to clear his mind: “We’nz goin’ t’push through ’em, ser?”

In many line outfits that might have been insolence; Descotters had an easy, unservile way with their squires, though. And he was a long-service man with a good record.

“No, Messer Raj knows a way around,” Colonel Staenbridge said. “We just have to block them while the main force gets through. I’ll come myself. Lead the way, Corporal.”

M’Telgez looked around at the bewildering tangle of blind canyons, sinkholes, and ragged hills. The Spirit must be wit ‘im, he decided. Which was a comforting thought.

“Cheer up, lad,” Staenbridge said, as the column formed up and passed the dead predator.

One of the troopers tossed him a fang as long as his hand, with a lump of bloody gum still on the base. M’Telgez dropped it into his haversack; it’d be something to show the girls, cleaned up and worn around his neck on a thong. Might as well get something out of that; that poor fastardo M’tennin wasn’t going to, not even a burial. There wouldn’t be anything left of him or much of his dog by the time they got there.

“Cheer up. Could have been worse—it could have been wogs.”

M’Telgez looked down at the four-meter length of tiger-striped deadliness lying in the dirt. He nodded. That was true enough. The carnosauroid had only wanted to kill and eat him.

Wogs might have taken him alive.


“Good,” Raj said. “That was clever of Tewfik, but he had to split his covering force up into too many detachments—there are a lot of badlands out there.”

Staenbridge nodded. “Only two or three hundred men on the route we actually took,” he said. “Still, it might have gotten sticky if we couldn’t go around—they had an excellent position. How did you know that section of earth was thin enough to cut through behind them?”

An angel told me, and it could tell the thickness of the gully walls by measuring how inaudible sounds passed through, Raj thought sardonically. He wondered what Staenbridge would make of the explanation. Raj didn’t understand a word of it himself.

sound waves are—

Forget it. I know it works, I don’t have to know how or why.

“Lucky guess, Gerrin.” The tone ruled out any further questions. “We’re about—”

two point six kilometers.

“—two and a half klicks from the bridgehead, now. This is going to be tricky.”

“You expect Tewfik to catch us crossing?” Staenbridge said, raising a brow.

“No, but he’s not the only competent commander in the Colonial army, and he’ll be in heliograph contact with their main body. What I want you to do is—”


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Framed