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Authors: Adrian Tchaikovsky

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BOOK: War Master's Gate
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Too long
, was the thought nobody dared voice, for Captain Vrakir and his Red Watch constantly stalked through the army with their Imperial writ, just waiting for someone to express
doubts about the Empress’s plans.

‘This airship,’ Tynan spat out, over the sound of the bombs.

‘Bergild and I, we calculate it’ll be in sight by late dawn tomorrow – and believe me, the Collegiates won’t miss it. That’s the other thing: Vrakir’s ordered
all our fliers made ready for it – our artificers have been busy brewing up that muck that their Captain Nistic gave them the recipe for – and it’s nothing I recognize, I can tell
you. Stinks, though, sir. Nobody wants a bed near where they’re boiling it.’

‘And you’re confident this will work, this scheme of theirs?’

‘No, sir.’ Oski looked profoundly unhappy, enough so that the bomb that now impacted close enough to shake the ground beneath them barely made him flinch. ‘Sir, this is outside
my profession, and I have no idea at all. But we all know we’ve got nothing else.’

‘Too true,’ Tynan agreed moodily. ‘So, tell me about the walls. What have we got left that will put a dent in them?’

‘The walls themselves? Nothing reliable unless we can undermine then and pack the tunnel with explosive. And I reckon those walls go down a way, too. The gate, I think we have a chance
against if we’re left free to work. I can adapt some leadshotters as ramming engines, and they should get through it if we can bring them to bear. Other than that . . . well, the Sentinel
handlers reckon that their machines might be up to it, but I’m not convinced. It’s not what they’re built for, and I just don’t know their specifications well
enough.’

‘Get the ramming engines ready,’ Tynan told him. ‘Do what you can.’ Another explosion nearby left a fine mist of dirt sifting down on them.

‘I reckon we’ll receive at least one attack from their fliers overnight, if they’ve any sense,’ Oski ventured. ‘I’ll have the ground crew ready to refuel and
patch up the Farsphex, once they’re down from that. Then it’s down to the chemical artificers and that stink of theirs.’

Tynan was not looking at him, nor at the wheeling orthopters, but instead somewhere off and away, towards the walls of Collegium, so that eventually Oski had to prompt him,
‘Sir?’

‘Do what you can,’ the general repeated. He looked as if he was trying on the face of his own corpse: a general faced with the choice of sending thousands of his soldiers into a
catastrophic attack, or else disobeying an order. Then he gestured for one of his officers. ‘Send out messengers. The advance commences at dawn, battle order unchanged.’ Then, more
thoughts spoken aloud. ‘If their fliers are likely to be occupied with this airship, even for a moment, we’ll make use of that time.’

Awkwardly, Oski backed away, and turned at a respectful distance to fly off and get his hands dirty, because some hard and absorbing engineering was just what he needed to chase the image of
General Tynan’s face from his mind.

The Vekken were all within Collegiate walls now, and nobody had complained about it. That seven hundred of the city’s oldest enemy were suddenly being welcomed with open
arms, and nobody – not
anybody
– had stood up and remarked on the fact, was perhaps the most telling sign of how the world had changed.

There had been word from Sarn, too, but nothing good. The Eighth Army was not as far advanced as the Second, but there was only so much the Sarnesh could do to slow it, and they would inevitably
clash soon. With the Mantis question still unanswered, who would prevail remained anybody’s guess.

And then there’s the other aspect of the Sarnesh.
Both Laszlo and Balkus had tried to corner him on the subject of Tactician Milus and the liberties he took, but Stenwold had
waved them both away. After all, there was nothing he could do.

Laszlo was kicking about the city, sulking, but he would get over it. He was probably commiserating with the rest of the
Tidenfree
crew even now. The ship itself remained in harbour,
given that the Empire had precious little way to strike at it, but the former pirates would be taking their leave soon, Stenwold knew. As for Balkus and Sperra, for all he knew, they were forming a
Princep government in exile or something similarly impolitic.

Or they don’t have anywhere else to turn but to call on me.
An unhappy thought, given that he had nothing for them.
After the war, we can sort it all out.
Although
Stenwold had an uncomfortable feeling that, if Sarn decided to take control of Princep now, the Ants would not be so easily dislodged later.

The Second Army had held off, still spread out and hard to damage with bombs; also still just outside artillery range – a distance established after a few incautious Imperials came too
close and Madagnus showed them the new teeth the city had.
Waiting for something . . .
Or perhaps Tynan was just frozen with indecision, knowing how bad his position was. But Stenwold did
not believe that.

‘Maker.’

It was after dark now, but he had plenty of paperwork to keep him up, enough to fill the time until this diminutive figure slouched into his current office, still wearing grease-dirty
pilot’s leathers, with a chitin helm and goggles hanging from her belt.

‘Taki,’ he nodded.

The Solarnese woman looked worn out, but then she was well known for pushing herself far further than any of the pilots who served under her. She found a footstool and sat down on it, and
Stenwold poured her a bowl of wine.

She took it in both hands and sipped, wrinkling up her face. ‘Maker, back home the only way you’d find wine this bad is by pissing it out after a heavy night.’

‘It’s all I’ve got left. There’s a city-wide shortage. We’ve asked the Tseni if they could ship some in, but apparently they don’t drink it off the Atoll
Coast.’ He shrugged apologetically. ‘We’ve had some interrupted harvests, what with . . . everything, you know. A few years that won’t have a vintage. What did you
find?’

‘Nothing,’ she told him tiredly. ‘I went up the coast, halfway to Tark, I swear. No reinforcements, nothing coming in by sea, no automotives . . . not even a supply airship.
The only thing is if maybe they’ve got another twenty Farsphex coming from somewhere – and they could get here overnight. We’ve got the Great Ear listening out for their engines,
if they do. But nothing yet, Stenwold.’

She tried the wine again, and forced down a throat-full. ‘Not got anything to eat, have you? I came straight here.’

‘I appreciate it.’ Stenwold had some bread and goat’s cheese left, and shoved it across his desk towards her. ‘What about their army?’

‘They’ll come for you tomorrow, I reckon,’ Taki confirmed. ‘They’re still all over the place, but by evening we could see how each detachment of them was pulling
itself together, forming up. Maybe they’ll try a night attack, but I know that the Companies and the artillery are ready for that. We’ve got lights all along the wall and people
watching the air, I think – and an extra guard on the gatehouse just in case. And it’s not as if they could really sneak up on us.’

‘You should get some sleep,’ Stenwold advised.

‘I should have
got
some sleep last night,’ she corrected. ‘Tonight we’re going to stop the Wasps getting any sleep instead.’

‘Let someone else lead the flight.’

‘I see better in the dark.’ She sagged, looking very small, almost flimsy enough to blow away. ‘Pits, maybe you’re right, at that. When I came here, you remember what the
deal was? You made me a new flier, I taught at your College – Associate Mastership or whatever. Didn’t say anything about commanding your air defences and fighting wars for
you.’

‘I know, we owe you a great deal and we take you for granted,’ Stenwold confirmed. ‘At the moment I can’t afford not to take for granted those people I know can be relied
on.’

‘Pisspoor compliment that is,’ she muttered. ‘Anyway, not as if I can exactly go home any time soon.’ Solarno, her home city, was held between the Wasps and their Spider
allies: one of the first conquests of the war. ‘Might as well be here. At least I get to fly.’

‘Seriously, though, get some sleep. Those are War Master’s orders,’ he told her gently. ‘If they’re going to march tomorrow, we’ll need you fresh.’

She was cramming bread into her mouth and just nodded vaguely, dipping it into the wine to soften it, seeming almost too tired to chew. When she found him staring at her, she met his gaze with
raised eyebrows, and that irreverence, at least, was something of her usual manner.

Then there was another Fly-kinden appearing at his door, with a brisk knock. Jodry’s secretary come to fetch him to deal with some new disaster of bureaucracy. Stenwold shrugged at Taki.
‘Finish the wine, if you can stomach it,’ he suggested, and then bustled out, only hoping that Taki would actually take his advice and get some sleep.

‘What’s this?’ Bergild demanded. She had been kicked out of fitful sleep by the complaints of her pilots that the engineers were tampering with their
Farsphex. Most of her team slept beside or even inside their craft these days, what with the alarm ready to be sounded night or day. Also, many were so strung out on Chneuma that they barely slept
at all. Any long period of inactivity just resulted in a sort of slack-jawed trance plagued by horrible, nightmarish daydreams, breaking into instant wake-fulness the moment the call to arms went
up.

Now the engineers appeared to be set on making even their waking hours as unreal and unpleasant as possible.

‘What are you doing?’ she shouted. She had been in Oski’s tent, having been left there after nodding off in the small hours. The anticipated Collegium night attack had come and
gone, but casualties had been lighter than expected. Although the Second was mustering for their attack, the enemy pilots had been put off their aim by the thick dark of cloud cover, and had wasted
most of their cargo.

‘Orders,’ one of the engineers yelled over his shoulder. He was only a lieutenant and so there should have been a “sir”, but she was used to not receiving it. What she
was not used to was the smell.

The engineers wore masks to exclude the worst of it, but a wide berth was already being given to her craft –
and all the others, her mindlink confirmed
– as a reeking
mixture was slopped over every surface of the flier. It was . . . she found it hard to say just what it was like: acrid and sharp, bringing tears to the eyes, and biting at the inside of her
nose.

‘Whose orders?’ she wanted to know.

‘Captain Vrakir’s,’ and then, because the lieutenant registered how close she was, and that she had her hands open and slightly directed towards him, he added,
‘Sir.’

‘It’s the new plan, sir. Captain Nistic, that came a couple days ago, he gave us the recipe for this,’ another engineer explained. ‘We’re to paint it onto every
flier we’ve got. And no, we don’t know why, sir, or what it’s for. But you’ve seen how the Red Watch faces up to the general. Empress’s own words, that’s what
they say.’

And what makes you think the Empress knows the first thing about air combat?
Bergild reflected.
What makes you think she knows the first thing about what Captain Vrakir’s
doing in her name, either?
But this last observation sounded hollow even in her own mind. Whenever Vrakir spoke, there was some authority leaking out in his words that she could not account
for. Certainly it was true that Tynan himself listened to him, even if he was plainly unhappy about it.

‘No problems, I’m sure, Captain?’

She jumped. The man was right behind her and she was unused to being surprised.

‘Captain Vrakir,’ she addressed him coldly, ‘what’s the meaning of this? Is this . . .
reek
supposed to keep the Collegiates away?’

‘It’s a necessary precaution, that’s all. More than that, you—’

‘Don’t need to know,’ she finished for him, and had the pleasure of seeing his lips tighten in annoyance. ‘This plan of yours . . .?’

He held a finger up. ‘Is not to be spoken of. You, Major Oski and his slave have been circumspect so far, and tomorrow – almost today, now – all will become clear to everyone,
most especially to the Empress’s enemies. But don’t abandon your discretion. There could be Collegiate spies listening even now.’

The engineers, who had most surely been eavesdropping, resumed their foul task with exaggerated dedication.

Vrakir moved very close, but Bergild would not give ground before him. She found she regretted that when he spoke virtually into her ear, ‘You have seen, though. You know what we will do
to them.’

‘I don’t think
anyone
knows what will happen once that surprise gets here,’ she replied, fighting down her instinct to squirm away from him. ‘Not you, and not
Captain Nistic either. And you’ve seen him. He’s mad.’

‘A little savage, perhaps,’ Vrakir allowed, and she could almost mime his next words, they were so predictable: ‘but these are savage times. Believe me, Captain Nistic is
devoted to the Empire. He and his fellows have waited a long time to bring their particular talents to bear.’

At last she stepped back, because that red badge of his, pressing almost against her shoulder, felt as though it might burn or bite her at any moment.

Then the alarm came instantly into her mind:
Captain – enemy orthopters.
She kicked off immediately and was halfway into her craft’s side-hatch, about to wriggle down the
crawlspace for the cockpit, when she heard;
Three – no, four only. Not stopping and keeping well north of us
, and she decided,
Scouts.

Not overflying the army, Captain. Pursue?

She had a mental image of their direction now, as though revealed on a map. ‘They’ve found your new toy, Vrakir,’ she told the man, who had caught up with her. ‘The
Collegiates know it’s there, somehow. Four orthopters are off to look at it right now.’

For a moment his face froze, as if left unattended at the front of his head, while thoughts meshed behind it. ‘The escort can fend off four,’ he decided.

BOOK: War Master's Gate
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