An Oblique Approach Read online

Page 9


  For the first half-hour of their trek back to the Roman fort at Mindouos, Belisarius simply relaxed and enjoyed the ride. It was early afternoon, and the heat was already intense, but at least he was not confined within a stifling tent. And, soon enough, a cooling breeze began to develop. The breeze came from the west, moreover, so it had the further advantage of blowing the dust of their travel behind them.

  Yet, that same pleasant breeze brought Belisarius' mind back to his current predicament. He had been giving that breeze much thought, these past days. Very reliable, it was, always arising in early afternoon, and always blowing from the west to the east. He treasured that reliability, caught as he was in a situation with so many variable factors.

  As the three men rode back to the camp in silence, therefore, Belisarius began to consider his options. His natural inclination, given the circumstances, would have been to stall for time. For all Firuz' vainglory, Belisarius did not think the Persian was actually ready to launch a war immediately. Stall, stall, stall—and then, perhaps, the Emperor Justinian and his advisers would come to their senses.

  But the knowledge that Belisarius now possessed, from the jewel, made that option unworkable. He simply didn't have the time to waste in this idiotic and unnecessary conflict between Byzantium and Persia. Not while the forces of Satan were gathering their strength in India.

  I've got to bring this thing to a head, and quickly, and be done with it. The only way to do that is with a resounding victory. Soon.

  Which, of course, is easier said than done. Especially with—

  He glanced again at the brothers. Bouzes and Coutzes looked enough alike that Belisarius had taken them, at first, for twins. Average height, brown-haired, hazel-eyed, muscular, snub-nosed, and— He would have smiled if he hadn't been so irritated. In truth, the Persian's insult had cut close to the quick. If the brothers had any brains at all, Belisarius had seen precious little indication of them.

  After three days of argument, he had managed to get the brothers to agree, grudgingly, to combine their forces. Three days!—to convince them of the obvious. There had been no hope, of course, of convincing them to place the combined force under his command. Belisarius had not even bothered to raise the matter. The brothers would have taken offense, and, in high dudgeon, retracted their agreement to combine forces.

  Eventually, as they neared the fort at Mindouos, Belisarius decided on his course of action. He saw no alternative, even though he was not happy with the decision. It was a gamble, for one thing, which Belisarius generally avoided.

  But, he thought, glancing at the brothers again, a gamble with rather good odds.

  Now, if Maurice can manage—

  He broke off the thought. They were almost at the fortress. The transition from the barren semidesert to the vivid green of the oasis where he had situated his fort was as startling as ever. In no more time than a few horse paces, they moved from a desolate emptiness to a populated fertility. Much of that population was soldiery, of course, but there were still a number of civilians inhabiting the oasis, despite the danger from the nearby Persians. Three grubby but healthy-looking bedouin children, standing under a palm tree nearby, watched the small group of Roman officers trot past. One of them shouted something in Arabic. Belisarius did not quite make out the words—his Arabic was passable but by no means fluent—but he sensed the cheerful greeting in the tone.

  "Hell of job you did here, Belisarius," remarked Bouzes admiringly, gazing up at the fortress. His brother concurred immediately, then added: "I don't see how you did it, actually. In the time you had. Damned good fort, too. Nothing slap-dash about it."

  "I've got some good engineers among my Thracian retinue, for one thing."

  "Engineers? Among cataphracts?"

  Belisarius smiled. "Well, they're not really cataphracts, not proper ones. A bunch of farmers, at bottom, who just picked up the skills."

  "Wish we had some real cataphracts," muttered Bouzes. "Don't much care for the snotty bastards, but they're great in a fight."

  His brother returned to the subject. "Even with good engineers, I still don't see how you got the work done so quickly."

  "The basic way I did it was by setting the cavalry to work and challenging them to match the infantry."

  The brothers gaped.

  "You had cavalry doing that kind of shit work?" demanded Bouzes. He frowned. "Bad for morale, I would think."

  "Not the infantry's," rejoined Belisarius. "And, as for the cavalry's morale, you might be surprised. They wailed like lost souls, at first. But, after a bit, they started rising to the challenge. Especially after they heard the infantry taunting them for a lot of weaklings. Then I announced prizes for the best day's work, and the cavalry started pitching into it. They never were as good as the infantry, of course, but by the end they were giving them quite a run for their money. Won a few prizes, even."

  Bouzes was still frowning. "Still—even if it doesn't affect their morale directly, it—still."

  "Saps their self-esteem, over time," agreed his brother. "Bound to. It's dog work."

  Belisarius decided he'd been polite long enough.

  "Dog work, is it?" he demanded, feigning anger. "I would remind the two of you that the Roman empire was built by such dogs. By infantry, not cavalry. Infantry who knew the value of good fortifications, and knew how to put them up. Quickly, and well."

  He reined in his horse. They were now at the gate of the fortress. Belisarius pointed to the barrenness beyond the date palms, from which they had just come.

  "Do you see that border with Persia? That border was placed there centuries ago. By infantrymen. How far has your precious cavalry pushed it since then?"

  He glared at them. The brothers looked away.

  "Not one mile, that's how far." The gate was opening. Belisarius set his horse back in motion.

  "So let's not hear so much boasting about cavalry," he growled, passing through the gate.

  Rather well done, he patted himself on the back. They're not bad fellows, really. If they could just get that stupid crap out of their heads.

  The interior of the fortress was not as imposing as its exterior. In truth, Belisarius had been pressed for time, even with the aid of the cavalrymen, and so he had concentrated all effort on the outside walls and fortifications. Within those walls, the fortress was still just an empty parade ground, although it was covered now with the tents of his soldiers. He had not even built a command post for himself, but continued to use his tent as a headquarters.

  As soon as Belisarius dismounted and walked into his command tent, followed by the two brothers, Maurice made his appearance.

  "We've got a prisoner," the hecatontarch announced. "Just brought him in."

  "Where did you catch him?"

  "Sunicas' regiment had a skirmish this morning with a group of Persians. About three hundred of them, ten miles north of here. After Sunicas drove them off, they found one fellow lying on the ground. Stunned. Horse threw him."

  "Bring him here."

  Belisarius took a seat at the large table in the middle of the tent. Bouzes and Coutzes remained standing. A few minutes later, Maurice reappeared, along with Valentinian. Valentinian was pushing a Persian soldier ahead of him. The Persian's wrists were bound behind his back. By his dress and accouterments, Belisarius thought the Persian to be a midlevel officer.

  Valentinian forced the Mede into a chair. Exhibiting the usual Persian courage, the officer's face remained still and composed. The Persian was expecting to be tortured, but would not give his enemy the satisfaction of seeing his fear.

  His expectation was shared by Bouzes and Coutzes.

  "We've got a first-rate torturer," announced Coutzes cheerfully. "I can have him here inside the hour."

  "No need," replied Belisarius curtly. The general stared at the Mede. The Persian met his eyes unflinchingly.

  For a moment, Belisarius considered interrogating the officer in his own language. Belisarius was fluent in Pallavi, as he
was in several languages. But he decided against it. Bouzes and Coutzes, he suspected, were ignorant of the Persian language, and it was important that they be able to follow the interrogation. By the richness of his garb, the Persian was obviously from the aristocracy. His Greek would therefore be fluent, since—in one of those little historical ironies—Greek was the court language of the Sassanid dynasty.

  "How many men does Firuz have under his command?" he asked the Mede.

  "Fifty-five thousand," came the instant reply. As Belisarius had suspected, the man's Greek was excellent. "That doesn't include the twenty thousand he left in Nisibis," added the Persian.

  "What a lot of crap!" snarled Coutzes. "There aren't—"

  Belisarius interrupted. "I will allow you four lies, Mede. You've already used up two of them. Firuz has twenty-five thousand men, and he took them all when he left Nisibis."

  The muscles along the Persian's jaw tightened, and his eyes narrowed slightly. Other than that, he gave no indication of surprise at the accuracy of Belisarius' information.

  "How many of those twenty-five thousand are cavalry?" asked Belisarius.

  Again, the Mede's answer came with no hesitation:

  "We have no more than four thousand infantry. And most of our cavalry are lancers."

  "That's the third lie," said Belisarius, very mildly. "And the fourth. Firuz has ten thousand infantry. Of his fifteen thousand cavalry, no more than five are heavy lancers."

  The Persian looked away, for a moment, but kept his face expressionless. Belisarius was impressed by the man's courage.

  "I'm afraid you've used up all your lies." Without moving his gaze from the Persian, Belisarius asked the two Thracian brothers: "You say you have a good torturer?"

  Bouzes nodded eagerly. "We can have him here in no time," said Coutzes.

  The captured officer's jaw was now very tight, but the man's gaze was calm and level.

  "Has the pay caravan arrived yet?" demanded Belisarius.

  For the first time since the interrogation began, the Persian seemed shaken. He frowned, hesitated, and then replied: "What are you talking about?"

  Belisarius slammed the table with his open palm.

  "Don't play with me, Mede! I know your army's pay chest was sent out from Nisibis five days ago, with an escort of only fifty men."

  Belisarius turned his head and looked at Bouzes and Coutzes. A disgusted look came on his face. "Fifty! Can you believe it? Typical Persian arrogance."

  Coutzes opened his mouth to speak, but Belisarius motioned him silent. He turned back to the captured officer.

  "What I don't know is if the pay caravan has arrived at your camp. So, I ask again: has it?"

  The Persian's face was a study in confusion. But, within seconds, the Mede regained his composure.

  "I imagine it has," he replied. "I left our camp the day before yesterday. That's why I hadn't heard anything about it. But by now I'm sure it's arrived. Nisibis is only four days' ride. They wouldn't have dawdled."

  Belisarius studied the officer silently for some time. Again, Coutzes began to speak, but Belisarius waved him silent. The young Thracian general's face became flushed with irritation, but he held his tongue.

  After a couple more minutes of silence, Belisarius leaned back in his chair and placed his hands on his thighs. He seemed to have come to some sort of decision.

  "Take him out," he commanded Valentinian. Bouzes began to protest, but Belisarius glared him down.

  No sooner were they alone, however, than the brothers erupted.

  "What the hell kind of interrogation was that?" demanded Bouzes. "And why did you stop? We still don't know anything about that pay caravan!"

  "Silly damn waste of time," snorted Coutzes. "You want to get anything useful from a Mede, you've got to use a—"

  "Torturer?" demanded Belisarius. He rolled his eyes despairingly, exhaled disgust, sneered mightily. Then he stood up abruptly and leaned over the table, resting his weight on his fists.

  "I can see why you haul around a professional torturer," snarled the general. "I would too, if I was a fool."

  He matched the brothers' glare with a scorching look of his own.

  "Let me explain something to you," he said icily. "I wasn't in the slightest bit interested in getting information from the Persian regarding the pay caravan. He doesn't know anything about it. How could he? The pay caravan only left Nibisis the day before yesterday."

  "The day before yesterday?" demanded Bouzes, puzzled. "But you said—"

  "I said to an enemy officer that the pay chest left five days ago."

  The brothers were now silent, frowning. Belisarius resumed his seat.

  "My spies spotted the caravan as soon as it left the gates of the city. One of them rode here as fast as possible, using remounts. There's no way that caravan has reached Firuz' camp yet."

  "Then why did you—"

  "Why did I ask the Mede about it? I simply wanted to get his immediate reaction. You saw what a talented liar he was. Yet when I asked him about the pay caravan, he had to fumble for an answer. What does that tell you?"

  Apparently, they weren't that stupid, for both brothers immediately got the point.

  "The Persians themselves don't know about it!" they exclaimed, like a small chorus.

  Belisarius nodded. "I'd heard that the Medes were starting to send out some of their pay caravans in this manner. Instead of tying up a small army to escort the caravans, they're relying on absolute secrecy. Even the soldiers for whom the pay's destined don't know about it, until the caravan arrives."

  The brothers exchanged glances. Belisarius chuckled.

  "Tempting, isn't it? But I'm afraid we'll have to let it go. This time, anyway."

  "Why?" demanded Bouzes.

  "Yes, why?" echoed his brother. "It's a perfect opportunity. Why shouldn't we seize it?"

  "You're not thinking clearly. First, we have no idea what route the caravan's taking. Don't forget, we'd only have one day—two at the most—to catch the caravan before it arrives at the Persian camp. In order to be sure of finding it, we'd have to send out an entire regiment of cavalry. At the very least. Two regiments, to be on the safe side."

  "So?" demanded Coutzes.

  "So?" Belisarius cast an exasperated glance upward. "You were at the parley with Firuz today, were you not?"

  "What's the point, Belisarius?"

  "The point, Coutzes, is that Firuz is getting ready to attack us. We're outnumbered. We need to stay on the defensive. This is the worst time in the world for us to be sending our cavalry chasing all over Syria. We need them here, at the fort. Every man."

  Coutzes began to argue, but his brother cut him short by grabbing his arm.

  "Let's not get into an argument! There's no point in it, and it's too hot." He wiped his brow dramatically. Belisarius restrained a smile. In truth, there was hardly any sweat on Bouzes' face.

  Bouzes wiped his brow again, in a gesture worthy of Achilles. Then said: "I think we've finished all our business here. Or is there anything else?"

  Belisarius shook his head. "No. Your officers have all been told that we are combining our forces?"

  "Yes, they know."

  A brief exchange of amenities followed, in which Coutzes participated grudgingly. Bouzes, on the other hand, was cordiality itself. The brothers left the tent, with Belisarius escorting them. He chatted politely, while Bouzes and Coutzes mounted their horses. He did not return into the tent until he saw the brothers cantering through the gates of the fort.

  Maurice was waiting for him inside.

  "Well?" asked the hecatontarch.

  "At nightfall, give the captured Persian officer my message for Firuz and let him go. Make sure he has a good horse. Then pass the word quietly to the men. I expect we'll be leaving at dawn."

  "That soon?"

  "Unless I'm badly mistaken, yes." He glanced back at the entrance to the tent. "And I don't think I'm mistaken."

  "You should be ashamed of yourself."


  Belisarius smiled crookedly. "I am mortified, Maurice, mortified."

  The hecatontarch grunted sarcastically, but forebore comment. "Ashot's back," he said.

  "What did he think of the location?"

  "Good. The hill will do nicely—if the wind blows the right way."

  "It should, by midday."

  "And if it doesn't?"

  Belisarius shrugged. "We'll just have to manage. Even if there's no wind, the dust alone should do the trick. If the wind blows the wrong way, of course, we'll be in a tight spot. But I've never seen it blow from the east until evening." He took a seat at the table. "Now, send for the chiliarchs and the tribunes. I want to make sure they understand my plan perfectly."

  That night, immediately after the conclusion of the meeting with his chief subordinates, Belisarius lay down on his cot. For almost an hour he lay there in the darkness, thinking over his plans, before he finally fell asleep.

  As the general pondered, aim delved through the corridors of his mind. Time after time, the facets threatened to splinter. Despair almost overwhelmed them. Just when the alien thoughts had begun to come into focus! And now, they were—somehow at odds with themselves. It was like trying to learn a language whose grammar was constantly changing. Impossible!

  But aim was now growing in confidence, and so it was able to control the facets. With growing confidence, came patience. It was true, the thoughts were contradictory—like two images, identical, yet superimposed over each other at right angles. Patience. Patience. In time, aim sensed it could bring them into focus.

  And, in the meantime, there was something of much greater concern. For, despite the blurring, there was one point on which all the paradoxical images in the general's mind coalesced sharply.

  At the very edge of sleep, Belisarius sensed a thought. But he was too tired to consider its origin.

  danger.

  Chapter 7

  Belisarius awoke long before dawn. Within a short time after rising, he was satisfied that the preparations for the march were well in hand. Both of his chiliarchs were competent officers, and it soon became apparent that the tribunes and hecatontarchs had absorbed fully the orders he had given them the night before.

 

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