Evil for Evil
Page 57
Someone else joined the discussion. “Hoofprints and cart tracks,” he said. “Of course they’re all scraped up, and there’s no way of knowing which are the looters. A lot of horses, though.”
“Do you think it was the garrison from the inn?” someone asked.
“Too many for that. We were told there was only one squadron.”
“That’s what I saw,” Daurenja said. “In which case, this must be a different unit. It’d be helpful to know which direction they came from, but I expect that’s too much to ask.”
“Makes you wonder how they found us,” someone said. All very calm and reasonable; like men contemplating the root harvest, or the outcome of a race meeting. “Mind you, if their scouts saw us, it wouldn’t take a giant leap of imagination to figure out we’d been left behind for some reason and the main body was up ahead. They’d go after the Duke first, and then come back for us.”
“Assuming they’ve won,” someone else pointed out. “We don’t even know that for sure.”
In the pile was a Vadani man with blood caked under his fingernails, lying on top of a Mezentine with both arms missing. Both arms. An arm’s a bitch to cut through at the best of times, tough as dry wood and springy as willow brash. The angle needs to be just right, and even then it takes a lot of strength and an uncluttered swing. Both arms …
“The looters won’t have gone far,” the junior officer was saying. “It’ll have taken them a good while to strip all this lot, then stacking the bodies; and they won’t be moving too fast with so much stuff to carry. If we had any idea of which direction they went in …”
Intelligent questions; good, helpful, intelligent observations. We are, above all, professionals. “We can’t stop to bury them,” Nennius said. “I don’t know whether to press on or go back. If they’ve won …”
If they’ve won, then it follows that we’re all that’s left. Suddenly, we’re the sum total of the Vadani people, under the command of Captain (acting duke) Nennius Nennianus. He swung round, looking for somewhere to hide. Pointless, of course. What if the Mezentines were coming, and they really were all that was left? Would anybody survive to tell future generations that it had all been Captain Nennius’ fault?
“We’d better keep going,” Daurenja said quietly beside him. “If the Mezentines are on their way back to get us, they’ll find us easily enough even if we turn round. If Valens is still out there, we need to join up with him as quickly as possible. We’d better get ready for a fight, though. No point in making it easy for them.”
They were waiting for him to say something. “Yes,” he said, “we’ll do that. And I want those looters found. The sooner we find out what’s happened, the sooner we’ll know what we’ve got to do.”
That seemed to be enough. Suddenly, everybody seemed to know what they were supposed to be doing (apart from himself, of course). He envied them. His life so far had hardly been easy, but its lines had been straight and its signposts legible.Apparently, a few naked dead men piled up in orderly ricks beside a road had been enough to change all that. The implication was unwelcome but perfectly clear. Up to now, he’d been missing the point entirely.
Walking back to find his horse, he ran into the Eremian: Miel Ducas, the resistance leader. His instinct was to quicken his pace and turn his head, to avoid pointless conversation. Instead, he slowed down, long enough for the Eremian to catch his eye.
“Excuse me,” Ducas said. “Can you tell me what’s going on?”
“There’s been a battle.” Not, when he thought about it, the best way of saying it. “We’ve found bodies; ours and theirs. It’s not clear who won. We’re pressing on, same plan as before.”
“Oh.” Ducas nodded. “Thank you,” he added; reflexive politeness of the nobility, meaningless. “Is there anything I can do to help?”
“No. Thank you,” Nennius added quickly. “All under control.”
“Thanks to Daurenja.” Ducas was looking at him as though pleading for something. “I gather he’s pretty well saved you from disaster.”
“Yes.” Damn all monosyllables. “Yes, we’d have been sunk without him.” Nennius hesitated, then made himself go on. “Is it true? What the other man said.”
“I don’t know,” Miel replied. “But I heard him admit it. And I don’t see any reason why they’d lie about something like that.” Hesitation. “I can see what a difficult position it puts you in.”
For some reason, Nennius found the sympathy infuriating; his own reaction surprised him. “Not at all,” he said. “Like I told you before, it’s not my jurisdiction. I’m not even sure the Duke’s got any authority in the case, since it’s crimes committed by an Eremian against Eremians in Eremia.”
“He’s not even Eremian,” Ducas said. “Daurenja, I mean. He’s Cure Doce by birth, apparently.” He frowned. “So who would be the competent authority?”
“Don’t ask me, I’m not a lawyer. Your own duke, I suppose. He’s with the Vadani, last I heard. But it’d be complicated by the fact that Daurenja’s an officer in Vadani service; you’d have to get Valens’ permission to proceed against him, even if you could find the proper Eremian official to hear the case; and that’s unlikely, since —”
“Since so many of the Eremians are dead now.” Ducas nodded reasonably. “But in this case, I suppose the proper authority would be me. Theoretically, I mean. All that side of Eremia used to be my land, and strictly speaking Framain and his household were my tenants.” Suddenly he smiled, a nervous, frightened expression. “Which makes me judge and chief prosecution witness. As though it wasn’t complicated enough already. I don’t suppose you’re the slightest bit interested, are you?”
Nennius looked away. “I’ve got rather a lot to do right now,” he said. “And I need Daurenja, at least until we meet up with Valens’ party, assuming they’re still alive. I can take formal notice of what you’ve just told me, but that’s about it, I’m afraid. And I’d be obliged if you wouldn’t make an issue out of it. At least, not till things have sorted themselves out.”
“When the Mezentines have been wiped out to the last man, you mean.” Ducas nodded again. “Of course. Thank you for your time. I’m sorry for wasting it.” He started to walk away.
“I’ll make sure Daurenja doesn’t leave the column until we meet up with the others,” Nennius said.
“Of course; he’s a very useful man, and we owe him our lives.” Ducas grinned; not the sad smile of a moment ago. “Pity, that. If he could just desert and go away, it’d make life so much easier. I’ll do what I can to keep Framain from cutting his throat in the night.”
Nennius’ horse wasn’t where he’d left it. Someone had moved it, no doubt trying to be helpful. He stood completely still for several minutes, entirely unable to decide what to do. Then they found him again.
There had been, they told him, a development. Come with us, we’ll show you.
It turned out to be just another stack of dead people, naked and cut about. “Pure fluke,” some excitable young officer was saying. “Someone happened to barge into this pile with a cart, and I was at the wedding, I saw her quite close up, so I recognized her. And then I saw him, too.” He was standing over two bodies that had been separated from the others; he looked like a dog standing over a toy it wants you to play with. Such cheerful enthusiasm.
Nennius looked at the bodies. A man he recognized; a strange-looking young woman. She’d been hit with a spear through the ribs; her head had been half split, like a stringy log with a knot in it.
“That’s General Mezentius,” Nennius said. “Who’s she?”
Don’t you know? the young officer’s face was shouting. “That’s the Duchess,” he said. “Valens’ wife.”
23
And again.
As his fingers took the strain of the bowstring, he realized from the pain that something was wrong with them. He glanced down and saw that the skin on either side of the middle joints of his first two fingers had been blistered and rasped away. He pushed t
he bow away from him with his left arm, hauled the string back with his right until his thumb knuckle brushed the corner of his mouth. The bow was fighting him now, like a panicked animal on a tether. Down the shaft, on the point of the arrowhead, he saw his target (impossible to think of it as a living thing, let alone a human being. His instructor had told him that, years ago: shoot at a deer and you’ll miss; shoot at the sweet spot behind the shoulder, size of a man’s hand, and you’ll have no problem). As the string began to pull through his fingers, he raised his left arm a little for elevation and windage. At just the right moment, the arrow broke free, lifted as the air took the vanes of the fletchings, peaked and swooped like a hawk. He watched it into the target, heard the strike. A straightforward heart-and-lungs placement; he was still moving, but already dead. Valens pinched the nock of another arrow between thumb and forefinger and drew it from the quiver. And again.
Only three arrows left in the quiver now. A minute or so since he’d refilled it, frantically scrabbling arrows out of the open barrel while keeping his eye fixed on the next target. Good archers only count the misses; he’d missed four times today. The stupid, stupid thing was that he liked archery, it was one of the few things he actually enjoyed doing (and so, of course, never had time for). Every stage of it soothed and pleased him; the smooth softness of putting the doeskin glove on his right hand, the expression of strength in the draw, the instinctive precision of the aim, the complete concentration, the fine judgment of tremendous forces poised in a moment of stillness, the visceral joy of the loose, the beauty of the arrow’s parabola, the solid pride of a well-placed hit. Using this precious, delightful skill to kill people was obscene. Using it to defend himself and his people from extinction was simply ridiculous, like dancing or flirting for your life.
And again. A Mezentine had managed to scramble up the side of one of the iron plates; he’d lost his momentum and was hanging from the top edge by his fingertips, his feet scrabbling wildly for an impossible foothold on the smooth, flat surface. Valens watched him for a moment; he was trying so hard, he’d done so well to get that far when all the others had failed; he wanted him to succeed, simply out of admiration for his courage and agility. The Mezentine got the sole of his foot flat on the plate and boosted himself up, an astonishing effort; he’d got his upper body up onto the edge and was using his weight to balance. He’d made it; so Valens shot him. He slithered back down the way he’d come and pitched in a slovenly heap of limbs on the ground. The cartwheel rolled over his head, crushing it into a mash.
As Valens nocked the next arrow, he spared a moment to glance into the barrel. Empty.
He hesitated. Vaatzes’ wonderful strategy of moving fortresses was posited on the assumption that the arrows wouldn’t run out. But they’d been shooting for two days and a night, and their splendid supply of ammunition was strewn out behind them like litter on the road; no chance to go back and pull arrows out of the dead. Two more shots and that was that.
Where the hell were all these Mezentines coming from? It was like rooks or pigeons over decoys, on a really good day, when they never stop coming in. He’d had days like that; they seemed to materialize in midair, as if they generated spontaneously somewhere in the distance. It wasn’t supposed to be like this. Vaatzes had been thinking in terms of occasional running battles with maybe two or three squadrons at a time, not a whole division, or two divisions; hundreds, not thousands. He realized he was drawing and aiming at a Mezentine riding parallel to his wagon. Only two shots left; he made his arms relax.
Out of the corner of his eye, he noticed that the cart that had been there all morning had disappeared, at some point, when he wasn’t watching. Another one; he’d tried to keep a count at first but he’d lost track. A dozen, maybe, that the enemy had managed to stop and overwhelm (a dozen that he could see from where he was). The losses hadn’t registered with him any more than the kills had done. Quite simply, he was worn out, like the deer that stops because it can’t run anymore.
Well: if they were out of arrows, two shots wouldn’t make any difference one way or another. He nocked, found a target and loosed. At ten yards, you’d be hard put to it to miss. One left, and then the Mezentines could swarm all over the carts like flies on cowshit for all he could do about it. Relieved of duty on grounds of exhaustion.
He scanned for a target. A Mezentine captain, standing up in his stirrups and shouting orders; a sitter, too easy if this was pleasure rather than business. Since it was the last shot, he allowed himself a little indulgence, and shot him through his open mouth.
And that was that. He unstrung his bow before putting it down, since keeping a bow strung when not in use ruins it. He’d die and be discarded as perishable and useless, but the bow was a very good one, valuable. It’d bring the looters a good price and serve its next owner well, if properly looked after. Then, wearily (let’s go through the motions and get it over with), he dragged his sword out of the scabbard. It was the hanger he’d been given by the grateful trader, in commemoration of that skirmish whose name he’d forgotten. If there was any poetic justice in the world, he’d bear it to victory through extraordinary feats of courage and slaughter. Unlikely.
He stood up, wavered a little until he found his balance, and looked around. He wasn’t the only one who’d run out of arrows. The carts all around him were heaving with Mezentines, like maggots in spoiled meat. Without the arrows to keep them off, they were having no trouble blocking and stopping the wagons, pulling down the drivers and fighters. He turned his head, and realized with a spurt of cold terror that the cart had stopped and he was alone on it — a moment ago there’d been a driver and two other archers, but either they’d been killed or they’d jumped down and run away. He felt disappointed. Somehow he’d never imagined himself dying alone, among strangers.
There was a hand on the top edge of the iron plate; four fingers, like worms or grubs. The instinct that moved him to slash at them was disgust, something like a fear of spiders or slugs. He chopped the fingers off, and felt his blade jar on the iron plate. There goes the cutting edge, he thought; oh well. Next came a head and shoulders. He saw a pair of wide-open eyes staring at him in horror; he misjudged the swing a little and sliced off just the scalp, like taking the top off a boiled egg. Enough to make whoever it was lose his grip on the iron plate, at any rate. As good as a kill, in context. While he was doing that, another one had his upper body and one knee on the top of the plate. That one he hit in the face, cutting into the bridge of the nose, and the cheeks on either side. The next one was over and into the cart before he’d finished with the last one, but he just had time for a short jab before the Mezentine found his balance. Sloppy; the point went in through the hollow between collarbone and shoulder, and it was lucky he had the presence of mind to follow up with a kick in the groin, which doubled the Mezentine up and made him stagger, trip against the edge of the plate and fall backward off the cart. The next one hit him on the knee before he was even ready.
He wasn’t aware of falling, or moving at all, but he was kneeling, and a Mezentine was standing over him, swinging a sword with both hands. He gave up, then noticed the opening and remembered he was still holding the hanger. His fencing instructor would have said it served the Mezentine right for taking too long over his stroke (you don’t need to cut hard, just hard enough). The stab in the pit of the stomach was really just a prod, rushed and half-hearted, but it got the job done; a pass, but no medal.
Valens remembered that he’d been hit; then he remembered that it didn’t matter, because he was wearing his leg armor. He stood up and looked down at his knee. The cop was creased but not cut through, not bent enough to jam the hinge. A Mezentine reared up in front of him but he killed him easily; so much so that, a moment later, he couldn’t remember a thing about him, what it had taken to dispose of him or how he’d fallen.
He looked again. Another hand was tightening its grip on the edge of the plate. Then he thought: there’s no point to this. Let them have the st
upid cart; time to leave. He glanced over his shoulder, to where the other cart had been but was no longer. If there was nothing left to fight for, why fight?
The jump down was further than he’d remembered. He landed awkwardly, yelped stupidly as his ankle buckled under him; painful, but it still worked in spite of his clumsiness. The Mezentine on the cart was looking down at him, apparently unaware how lucky he was that he still had all his fingers. Valens grinned at him and ran.
Not very far; too cluttered. He could see no moving carts, just still ones crawling with the enemy. There were dead people everywhere he wanted to put his feet (so much mess; how would anybody ever get it all cleared up?). He stumbled and hopped, trying to get across the track and up the steep slope on the other side, where horses couldn’t follow him. The enemy didn’t seem to notice him; since he wasn’t a cart, he wasn’t important. No other Vadani running away; apparently they’d all held their ground and died where they stood. Well, good for them. A Mezentine on a cart tried to reach out and swipe at him, but his cut fell a good six inches short; an afterthought, not a serious attempt on his life. He ignored it and kept going, not stopping until he’d pawed and crawled halfway up the slope; at which point he suddenly discovered that he was too exhausted to go any further.
From where he was he had a splendid view, as from a grandstand; best seat in the house, fitting for a Duke. He could see maybe two dozen carts, stationary, some with horses still in the shafts, some empty, some garnished with bodies, two overturned. If there were any Vadani still alive down there he couldn’t see them, and where had all those Mezentines got to, the unlimited supply of targets there’d been a moment or so ago? Four, five dozen, no more; they were standing up on the carts, or slowly, wearily climbing down, like farmhands getting off the haywains at the end of a very long day. They looked tired and wretched; he remembered that feeling, the miserable emptiness after another routine victory, another difficult hunt with nothing edible to show for it. Nobody was bothering to look up. They plodded as though every muscle and joint in their bodies ached. He almost felt sorry for them.