Dragon (Vlad Taltos) (16 page)

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Authors: Steven Brust

BOOK: Dragon (Vlad Taltos)
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The funny thing was I still didn’t feel anything. But, yeah, I’d managed to get myself cut. I didn’t look closely, but it was within a couple of inches of the same place I’d been cut a few days before. My grandfather would have told me my fourth position guard was drifting up. My grandfather, no doubt, would have been right. I’d have to—
“The jerkin?” said the physicker.
“Go ahead,” I told him.
He pulled the jerkin off, dropping four knives, a couple of shuriken, and three darts onto the ground. He gave me a look. “What?” I said.
He shook his head. “Lie down.”
“I can do that.”
He poured something onto my side; it felt cold, but there was still no pain. However, I did feel a few drops of rain on my face, then a few more. The first couple felt nice. After that I hated it, and I only wanted to get out of the mud.
Mud.
Gods, but I hate mud. I’d never noticed it before, but now I think I’ll hate it until they bury me in it. I had always thought my boots fit well, until the mud kept trying to pull them off my feet with each step. Sometimes it would succeed well enough that I had to step out of line, adjust, then run to catch up, and even without that I felt like I was constantly out of breath just from the extra effort. The water that leaked into my boots wasn’t that much fun either. And now I was lying in it.
I began to shiver, which, more than the knowledge of the wound, made me feel weak and vulnerable. The physicker did a few things I’m not sure of, probably sorcerous but maybe not, then he slapped a bandage onto my side and put some sort of cloth against my skin that held the bandage in place. They were both instantly soaked with water; maybe they’d have carried me to someplace dry if I were more seriously injured or if there were any such place.
The rain increased to a driving torrent, and I hated it.
“Why didn’t you tell me I was wounded?”
“I was afraid if I did it would start to hurt.”
“Oh. You’re pretty smart for a guy with no opposable thumbs.”
“Thank you so much.”
“That should do,” I was told. “Take it easy with that side for a few days.”
Physickers always say things like that. What exactly did he mean? Was I supposed to avoid having any more holes put in it? Good plan. I’d go with it.
“Okay,” I told him. “Thank you.”
He grunted and moved on. There were no more screams, but there were still a few moans that I could hear over the sound of rain striking wooden shields, metal swords, and whatever else was there to make sound against. Whoever had helped with my jerkin now helped me stand up, which made my side hurt, but not badly, which was just as well since I don’t much care for pain. It turned out to be Aelburr. I said, “Anyone else hurt?” which of course was a stupid question, but he knew what I meant.
“Napper lost some skin on his left hand, but nothing else.”
“Can’t one of our sorcerers stop this Verra-be-damned rain?”
“I suspect our sorcerers are more exhausted than anyone else on the field.”
“Oh. I suppose. Any idea what happens now?”
“We’ve picked up our wounded and our javelins, that’s always the first thing. Now, I imagine, we’ll re-form and—” The juice-drum
cut in again. I was getting very tired of the thing. Aelburr paused, then said, “Or maybe we retreat to a prepared position.”
“What does that mean?”
“With luck, it means the higher-ups had this in mind all along. Without luck, it means we’re running and they don’t want us to fall apart.”
“Oh. Yeah. I didn’t have to ask: They had it planned.”
“How do you know that?”
“Uh … I’m an Easterner. We know things.”
He didn’t look convinced, but he did help me find my pack, get my heavy cloak out and on, and then put the converted satchel onto my back. That hurt, too, but I could carry it.
“Carry it on the wounded side,” said Aelburr.
“Excuse me?”
“If you carry it on the healthy side the wound will open up.”
That made too much sense for me to ignore it, so I did as I was told, then made my way up to the mudworks, which were vanishing into the field, and stared out; I could just make the enemy out through the drizzle, formed in a solid, even line, not moving, about a hundred and fifty yards away.
The command came a little later, and this time it was in plain words: “Fall back!” Seemed like a fine idea. Rascha came along and formed us into something like a line, and then Crown yelled something and everyone else turned around so I did, too; we began to move, in one long line, the Captain to the extreme right, our backs to the enemy. We started out at a quick trot, which I can safely say that everyone in the company was better at than I was, but I kept up. Eventually, on command, we dropped it back to a fast march, which we kept up much too long, and then we halted and turned and waited.
The rain stopped at last, and it was followed by a bitter wind that was only partially blocked by my rain-drenched cloak. Happiness, I decided, would be a nice campfire, proving once again that happiness is minor misery where before was extreme misery, if that ever needed proving. But there was no fire, and we waited.
At the time I had no idea what was going on, or how our part fit into Sethra’s grand design, nor, to be honest, did I give it even a passing thought; but it is rare that a foot soldier has the chance to ask questions of his commanding general over a glass of red wine, and I had that advantage, so I ought to give you the benefit of what I was able to learn, later, when I had the leisure for curiosity.
Most of the division led by Morrolan had been about half a day’s march away from us the entire time, and while we pulled back after their first attack, they were advancing. The engineers had been killing themselves preparing a defensive position for just this circumstance, and it was Sethra’s hope (though not, she says, her expectation) that their entire corps could be lured into battle against our company and the other companies in the van, which would hold them just long enough for Morrolan’s division to arrive and scatter, trap, or crush them. Of course, it didn’t work that way, and what happened instead is that we fell back to the “fortified” position and stayed there for an entire day convinced we were to be attacked any minute, and then we abruptly broke camp and marched away in another direction entirely, which turned out to be due east, rather than the southeast that Sethra had originally planned on. I don’t know what led to the change; none of my business, I suppose.
I found it annoying, but everyone else seemed to take it as just part of the routine. The rains plagued us for the next day, and most of the conversation was about incompetent sorcerers who couldn’t manage the simplest weather control, and speculations about whether the whole thing was the work of Fornia’s sorcerers. We could all see that the weather system above us was too large and complex to be considered “simple” but that didn’t stop the remarks. I’d have hated to be a sorcerer; I’d have had to kill someone.
At the end of that day’s march, with the rain still coming down, all of us soaked to the skin, and the ambulances having already carried our wounded back toward the rear, we held services
for the nine soldiers in our company who’d been killed. The Captain gathered us together in formation facing the presumed enemy (I don’t know if they were five hundred yards from us or twenty miles at that point) and stood there flanked by tall torches, so we could see him. The bodies lay naked in front of us, wounds hidden, torsos glistening with rain and the embalming oils that would preserve them between here and Deathgate. I knew they were dead because they were the only ones present who weren’t shivering.
The Captain spoke of the pride of the House of the Dragon and promised the souls of each of the fallen that they would be sent to the Paths of the Dead, where he was confident they would be received with honor. He named them, and their rank (none higher than corporal), and asked the Lords of Judgment to look kindly upon them, and then said a few words in the ancient tongue of the House of the Dragon.
I felt as out of place as I’d ever felt anywhere, and I kept waiting for my natural cynicism to rescue me, but it was off catching up on the sleep that the rest of me wanted. Loiosh, too, was silent, and there was little talk as we broke up into squads and returned to our tents. I did ask Virt, in a quiet voice, how these things were handled, and was told that the bodies were to be placed on wagons and an honor guard sent to convey them to Deathgate Falls.
“Beyond that,” she said, “who knows?”
Well, I did. At least, I had a pretty good idea, but it didn’t seem right to say so. I was the only one in the company who had personal experience of what lay beyond Deathgate; I was also the only one in the company who had no right to the knowledge and the only one who, if killed in action, would not be sent there.
My natural cynicism finally appeared, but by then it was time to sack out for the night, so I could arise, rested and alert, and spend another day marching through rain and mud and eating bad food.
After a couple of days, the rains realized that we weren’t going
to quit so they stopped, and even the overcast became higher and thinner. There were mountains before us now: the Eastern Mountains in general, and Mount Drift in particular; I remembered it from the map. There was no more rain at all, as we had reached the dry lands west of the mountains; by whim of the Gods or freak of nature, the eastern slopes of the mountains were lush and forested while the western would have been desert were it not for the mountain streams, washes, and rivers that made their way across.
Now that the rain was gone, however, it was too hot, much too hot for marching, anyway. Both of my cloaks were stowed, my pack weighed a million pounds, give or take a couple, and even the little uniform cap was an irritation; the first thing everyone did when we stopped was take it off. On the other hand, I learned then what it was for: It kept the dust out of our eyes as we marched. Apparently cooling spells, or even wind spells, were too much work for the sorcerers of the company, and so those of us who knew a little sorcery, which was fortunately most of us, took turns attempting to summon up a breeze. This broke down by the second day of marching, after which we just put up with it.
I was now consuming six or seven biscuits at a meal, to show to what depths the human animal can be reduced. And we still had no idea to where we were marching, nor for what purpose. Well, I had a vague idea, thanks to having been at the one planning session, but it is one thing to hear elaborate strategic plans; it is quite another to spend a week marching with no knowledge of what was ahead except, in the most general terms, that we’d probably fight at some point. Stopping was a relief, but now, ironically, there was little reason to stop. We were on a good road cut by someone sometime for some reason through the harsh, rocky ground, but even the ground would have been passable, so we just trudged on and tried to make it to the next water break without screaming or choking on the dust kicked up by those in the front. My side did feel better.
Eventually, late one evening, we reached the Eastern River. I had assumed we would stop there, but whoever was in charge—that is to say, Sethra Lavode—wouldn’t hear of it. We were to cross at once, we heard. I studied the river in the fading light and would have scowled but I didn’t want to look like Napper.
There were grey, water-smoothed stones on the far side of the river, and smooth sandy banks near us; I’m willing to listen to explanations for that if you have any. Beyond it Mount Drift was getting close, and its companions were appearing tall and impassible. Impassible didn’t bother me, because I didn’t think we were going to pass them; as opposed to the river, where the engineers were already at work with wooden planks, floats made of sheep bladders, and prefabricated fittings. The river was wide here, and fast, but, we were informed, not more than four feet deep. “Not more than four feet deep” had a sound I didn’t like. The evening, ironically, had turned quite cool, so walking through water, for which I’d have traded my best dagger the day before, had, now, nothing to recommend it.
“Are they going to ask us to ford it?” I asked Virt, gesturing significantly at the engineers busily putting together their makeshift bridge.
“That’s what I’d do,” she said irritatingly. “We should have a force on the other side before we start to bring the wagons across, and the sooner the better.”
“Why?” I said, just because I was annoyed.
“Well, we have to figure the enemy is nearby; we’ve been skirting his territory for days, and he can’t let us just wander anywhere.”
I mentally pulled out the map of the area. Oh,
that’s
where we were. Okay, that made sense; once we crossed the river, we could follow it downstream right into the heart of Fornia’s territory; if Sethra wanted to force him to attack us, that would be the way to do it.
The drum ripped out, and by now I had no trouble recognizing
the call to form up and prepare to move. We did, grumbling. Virt and Aelburr seemed like the only two in the company who didn’t mind; just my luck to be in the only squad in the company with two irritatingly cheerful footsloggers. I made a remark to that effect to Napper, who nodded glumly.

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