Against the Tide of Years (70 page)

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Authors: S. M. Stirling

BOOK: Against the Tide of Years
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The horn dunted again from the chieftain’s steading, and the narrow gate swung open. No chariot came out of it; the reports were accurate, then—this particular tribal hegemon was progressive, as such things went in the Year 9. Instead of the traditional war-cart, he and his rode horseback, with saddles and stirrups made to Nantucketer models. They did carry weapons, but that was to show respect to warrior guests, swords slapping at sides in chased bronze scabbards or the more common axes across saddlebows, painted shields across their backs.
Likewise their finery, bright cloaks and tunics in gaudy patterns, kilts pyrographed in elaborate designs—or, for some, Islander trousers. The leader wore a tall bronze helmet with great ox horns mounted on it, the totem of his tribe. Beside him was a younger man whose helm was mounted with a metal raven, its wings flapping as his horse cantered; that was bravado, a declaration that he claimed the favor of the Crow Goddess, the Blood Hag of Battles. Behind the chieftain and his retainers walked trumpeters blowing on long, upright horns. Their bellowing echoed back from trees and river and palisade and a storm of wildfowl took wing from the water.
Marian flung up her hand. The trumpeter behind her blew his bugle, and the little column came to a halt. A wind from the river flapped out the red-white-and-blue silk of Old Glory, and the gilt eagle above it seemed to flap its wings as well.
“I am Commodore Marian Alston-Kurlelo,” she said in the local tongue. “Daughter of Martin, War Chief of the Eagle People.”
That harsh machine-gun-rapid speech came easily enough to her now; the complex inflections and declensions were simple, compared to her partner’s language.
“ We come in peace,” she went on, “to speak for the Republic to the chieftains of Sky Father’s children.” They’d undoubtedly heard of the mission and its message by now, but the forms had to be observed.
The older man nodded. He was tall for this era, an inch or two more than Marian. His brown beard was in twin braids and his hair in a ponytail down his back, the traditional Sun People styles. The face was handsome in a battered way; in his mid-thirties, early middle age by contemporary standards. The little finger of his left hand was missing, and his tanned skin was seamed with thin white scars; all in all he looked tough enough to chew logs, but the green-hazel eyes were friendly enough. Unlike those of some his followers . . .
“ I am Winnuthrax Hotorar’s son,” he replied. “Rahax of the Thaurinii folk. Be you guests and peace-holy beneath my roof and among my people. May the long-speared Sky Father hear me, and the Horned Man, and the Lady of the Horses. May your crops stand thick and your herds bear fruitfully; may your wi—” He coughed, paused, and am-mended the traditional “May your wives bear many sons.” “May your household prosper.”
“Long life and fruitful fields, weather-luck and victory-luck and undying fame be yours, Winnuthrax son of Hotorar,” Marian said ceremoniously. “May many descendants make sacrifice at your grave in times to come. May the God of my people guard you and all yours.”
Winnuthrax smiled, nodded, and dismounted. “ Your God is a powerful God,” he said, as Marian joined him. A youth came up with a platter of bread and salt, and a cup of mead. “As we learned on the Downs.”
“ You were there? ” she said, sprinkling the bread and taking a bite. The two leaders pricked their thumbs and squeezed a drop of blood into the mead, then shared the cup.
“ Indeed. I lead my tribe’s war band to the battle on the Downs, following the wizard,” he said casually. “ Likely I’d have laid my bones there if I hadn’t taken an arrow through my shoulder. Your Eagle People healers found me after our host fled, and it healed clean. Otherwise you’d be dealing with my son here. Eh, Heponlos? ”
The young man with the raven-decked helmet nodded. When he removed the helm, she saw he was short-haired and that his beard was cropped close to his jaw—Eagle People styles.
“So I know your God is strong to give victory,” Winnuthrax said. He inclined his head politely to Swindapa. “And so is Moon Woman, of course, lady. . . . Some of my people here have taken the water-blessing of your Eagle People skylord, He of the Cross, and the crops haven’t suffered, so the land-spirits don’t mind. I’d make Him sacrifice too, but His priests and priestesses say He won’t have those who don’t forsake others.”
Marian nodded and walked by the Thaurinii chieftain’s side as they led their horses up the slope to the stockade. She wasn’t surprised at the chief ’s lack of resentment; the Sun People tribes didn’t feel any lasting grudge at being beaten in a straight-up battle, and the Americans hadn’t ravaged their homes or harmed their families—quite the contrary—they’d prevented reprisals by the Fiernan Bohulugi, who
did
carry grudges. There were plenty of the easterners who resented the Alliance, but it was for other things.
“ You’ve prospered, chieftain,” Marian observed as they walked.
The broad shoulders shrugged. “ We’ve always been traders here as well as fighters—there’s blood of Moon Woman’s people in us, for all that we’re Sky Father’s children now. More trade of late, yes; and some of our young men have taken work on your ships, or in your war bands. The gold they win buys us new things, and those who return bring new knowledge and seemly ways.”
His son tossed off a creditable salute and smiled when Marian returned it in reflex.
“Hard Corps, fuckin’ A,” he said in English that was heavily accented, but fluent. “Corporal Heponlos Winnuthraxsson, Marine rifleman aboard
Frederick Douglass
on the Baltic expedition, ma’am.”
 
“Thank you, but we’ve sworn an oath to the Eagle People God to lie with none but each other,” Marian said politely.
“As you wish, of course,” Winnuthrax said, raising his mead-horn. He looked a little relieved; the obligations of Thaurinii hospitality hadn’t been designed with this sort of cross-cultural contact in mind. The servant girl he’d summoned looked relieved as well . . . or possibly that was a look of disappointed curiosity rather than anxious relief.
“I think it’s ‘disappointed curiosity’ this time,”
Swindapa whispered in her ear, grinning.
Marian snorted. “ You’re much prettier,” she murmured back. “And you don’t have nearly as many fleas.”
Something like this happened every time they guested overnight at a Sun People chieftain’s steading, but her partner still found it endlessly entertaining. Then again, the Fiernan language didn’t even have a
word
for monogamy; it was something Swindapa did out of love, because her partner cared about it. Marian looked at the servant girl’s neck; no scars, although she’d probably been wearing a collar until a few years ago. The prohibition on slavery in the Alliance treaty hadn’t been as hard to enforce as she’d once feared, but she suspected from the reports and her own observations that the abolition was often more a matter of form than fact, particularly in the backwoods.
Oh, well, Rome wasn’t built in a day.
Not everyone who worked in the Republic or served in its ships and regiments stayed on; plenty went back home, like her host’s son. That brought its own problems, but it carried the seeds of progress.
The hall of the Thaurinii chiefs reminded her strongly of the others they’d guested in over the past month, a sameness that underlay differences of detail. The walls were wickerwork thickly daubed with clay, between a framework of inward-sloping timbers that turned into the crutch-rafters that carried the thatch of the roof. The chief ’s seat was in the middle of the southern wall, a tall chair of oak and beech, its rear pillars carved in the shape of the Twin Horsemen, their most notable feature their erect luck-bringing philli. A second chair was for the most honored guests; everyone else sat on stools, or on benches, or the floor, with sheepskins and blankets beneath them if they were lucky.
She noticed one difference there; the floor was mortared flagstones, rather than dirt covered by reeds. There were still fire pits down the center of the floor, but there was also an iron heating stove with a sheet-iron chimney, both probably turned out here in Alba at Islander-owned plants. The feast had been mostly traditional—roast pork, mutton, beef, and horsemeat with bread—but there had been potatoes and chicken as well.
The Thaurinii differed from the more easterly tribes in some other respects too; the women of the chief ’s family had eaten with them, although they were withdrawing to the other end of the hall now that the serious drinking was supposed to begin. Probably residual Fiernan influence. She and Swindapa were being treated essentially as warrior-class men, of course, but she was used to that. Irritating, but not unbearably so.
Progress,
she thought.
Longest journey, single step, and all that.
Leaping shadows from the fire pits gleamed on the gold or copper that rimmed whole-cowhorn cups, on bright cloth and gold torques around hairy necks, on the weapons and shields hung on the walls between bright crude woolen hangings—she hid a smile at the printed Islander dish towels that held pride of place. Sun People art was often quite good of its kind, but when they fell for Nantucketer stuff they tended to nose-dive into the worst kitsch available. The air smelled of woodsmoke, cooking, a little of sweat and damp dog, but not very unclean—there had been a bathhouse here before the Event, although Winnuthrax had improved it with soap and a real tub since.
They’re really not such bad sorts,
Alston told herself.
Of course, they’re warlike and macho to the point of insanity, and cruel as cats to anyone who isn’t a blood relative or an oath-sworn ally, and they’d a thousand times rather steal something than make it themselves, but they have their points.
They were brave, and many of them were even honest . . .
Winnuthrax leaned over to refill her horn. Marian sighed; headache tomorrow, but at least they weren’t breaking out distilled liquor—when that met a tradition of heroic imbibing, the results could be gruesome.
“So, this is the same war as the one in the distant hot lands, closing in on the wizard Hwalker’s lands? Some of my folk enlisted with your Marine war band for that—two young men outlawed for kine-reaving outside the bans, Delauntarax’s daughter who ran away—but she was, ah, strange—and half a dozen who were just restless or poor or all together. The Cross-God priest at Seven Streams mission brings their letters to us sometimes and reads them. Much good fighting there, gold, good feasting, strange foreign lands to see. If I were younger, I’d be tempted myself.”
“ I
am
younger, and I
am
tempted,” his son Heponlos said.
“No, and again, no,” his father said, exasperated. “You are my heir.”
“You could pick one of my uncle’s sons and ask the Folk to hail him.”
“ No!”
Winnuthrax sighed, and then shrugged. “ Well, you can see there’s no shortage of young men anxious to blood their spears.”
Marian nodded. “ Yes, this is the same war—but a different part of it. Isketerol of Tarktessos is an ally of Walker’s, and he attacked us this spring. We slaughtered them then, and now we take the fight to their homeland. We don’t require your aid under the Alliance, but we ask it as oath-friends.”
“Hmmm.” Winnuthrax rubbed at his beard and then cracked something between thumb and forefinger. “Well . . . yes, that’s what I’ve heard.”
A feral light gleamed in his son’s eyes. “Tartessos swims in gold, they say; wine and silver and oil and cloth, many fine things.”
Marian felt Swindapa’s faint snort beside her.
Yes, I know,
she thought.
They
are
a bunch of bandits. But for now, they’re
our
bunch of bandits.
“ It’ll be a serious war,” she said.
“ But you’ll be supplying weapons? ”
She nodded, a trifle reluctant. The charioteer tribes would do anything to get their hands on firearms; the Republic kept modern ones—as “modern” was defined in the Year 9, meaning breechloaders—out of their hands as far as possible.
“Hmmm. Well, I’ll speak to the folk, talk to the heads of household, and hear their word,” Winnuthrax said.
He was a long way from an autocrat; war-leader, yes, but there was an element of anarchic democracy to these tribes, at least as far as free adult males were concerned.
“Let it never be bandied about that the Thaurinii don’t stand by their oaths and their friends, and you’ve dealt well with us, that’s beyond dispute.” He sighed again. “And enough of business—tomorrow, I can show you some boar worth the trouble of carrying a spear!”
This time it was Marian who sighed. Swindapa had taken the Spear Mark as a teenager, uncommon but not rare for a Fiernan girl; she actually
liked
hunting big dangerous pigs with a spear. Marian Alston liked hunting, but sensibly, with a gun. Still, you had to keep face. Sun people hospitality was like that; sacrifice, chanting and blood and fire, to put the guest in right with the tribal gods; sonorous ancestral epic; gluttonous feasting, drinking, boasting . . .
All very Homeric, but a month is about all I can take,
she thought. Nearly over, thank God, and then she could get back to the sort of rational preparation she felt comfortable with.
 
“ No, boss, I
can’t
do that,” Bill Cuddy said. “ Not a straight copy.”
He was sweating, a little. Usually Walker was sensible enough, but his temper was more uncertain than usual after the reverses in the East. It was times like these you remembered that he only had to shout, and the guards would come in and kill you—or even worse, hand you over to Hong.
There are times I really wish I hadn’t listened to Will,
Cuddy thought, forcing himself to meet the cold green eyes and shrug.
Yeah, I’ve got a mansion and a harem and I’m richer than god, and the work’s interesting, but sometimes . . .
The windows of the private audience room were open; outside, the blue-and-white-checked-marble veranda had an almost luminous glow under the afternoon sun, and the trails of hot-pink bougainvillea that fountained down the sides of man-high vases were an explosion of color. The warm herbal scents of a Greek summer drifted in, and the sound of cicadas, almost as loud as the city-clamor of Walkeropolis beyond. A servant entered and removed the remains of a pizza—Walker had eaten at his desk today, things were moving fast—and another knelt and arranged a tray of hot herbal tea, cold fruit juice, watered wine, and munchies. Bill Cuddy didn’t feel at all like eating, even those little pickled tuna things on crackers with capers, which he was usually pretty fond of.

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