He paused suddenly, and his eyes narrowed. He stood absolutely still, staring down at the map while his mind raced, and then he began to smile.
“Sean? Sean?” Sandy had to call him twice before he looked up with a jerk. “What is it?” she asked, and his smile took on a harder, fiercer cast.
“I’ve been going at this wrong,” he said. “I’ve been thinking about how Ortak has us blocked, and what I should have been thinking about is how he’s trapped himself.”
“Trapped?” she asked blankly, and he waved Tibold closer and pointed at the map.
“Could infantry get through these swamps?” he asked in Pardalian, and it was the ex-Guardsman’s turn to frown down at the map.
“Not pikes,” he said after a moment, “but you might be able to get musketeers through.” He cocked his head, comparing the exquisitely detailed map the angels had provided to all the ones he’d ever seen before, then tapped the southern edge of the swamp with a blunt forefinger. “I always thought the bad ground was wider than that down along the south face of the valley,” he said slowly. “We could probably get a column across this narrow bit in, oh, ten or twelve hours. Not with guns or pikes, though, Lord Sean. There’s no bottom to most of this swamp. You might get a few chagors through, but arlaks would sink to the axles in no time. And even after you get through the swamp, the ground’s still soft enough between there and the river to slow you.”
“Would Ortak expect us to try anything like that?” Sean asked, and Tibold shook his head quickly.
“He’s got the same maps we had before you and the ang—” The ex-Guardsman bit the word off as he remembered how Lord Sean and the angels kept trying to get people not to call them that. For a moment his face felt hot, but then he grinned up at his towering young commander. “He’s got the same maps we always had before. Besides, no Guard captain would even consider leaving his pikes and guns behind.”
“That’s what I hoped you’d say,” Sean murmured, and his brain whirred as he estimated times and distances. The Mortan was the better part of three unfordable kilometers wide above and below Erastor, but it could be forded at Malz, a farm town ninety-odd klicks below its junction with the Erastor River. If he moved back west, out of sight of Ortak’s lines, and threw together enough rafts … Or, for that matter, could his engineers knock together proper bridges? He considered the thought for a moment, then shook his head. No, that would take a good two or three days, and if this was going to work at all, he didn’t have two or three days to waste.
“All right, Tibold,” he said. “Here’s what we’ll do. First…”
High-Captain Ortak stood in his entrenchments’ central bastion and stared west. Drizzling rain drew a gray veil across the Keldark Valley, limiting his vision, but he knew what was out there and breathed a silent thanks for his enemies’ lack of initiative. Every day that passed without attack not only helped the morale of his battered force but brought its desperately needed relief one day closer.
He strained his eyes, trying to make out details of the earthworks the heretics had thrown up to face his own. Part of him shuddered every time he thought of the cost of taking that position once the Holy Host had reinforced and resumed the offensive, but not even that could shake his gratitude. He knew how thin-stretched he was, and if the heretics had been willing to throw a column straight at him anywhere—
He shivered, and not because of the rain. He disliked having to stand with a river at his back, but the Erastor was fordable for most of its length. If he had to, he could fall back across it, though he’d have to abandon what remained of his baggage, and this was the best—probably the only—point at which to stop an army from the west. Conscripted laborers were building another position in his rear at Baricon, but Baricon was better suited to resisting attacks from the east. No, he had to hold the heretics here if he meant to keep them out of Keldark, and if they ever got loose in the duchy their freedom of maneuver would increase a hundredfold. After what they’d done to Lord Marshal Rokas at Yortown, that was enough to strike a chill in the stoutest heart.
He wrapped his cloak about himself and pursed his lips in thought. The semaphore chain across Malagor had been cut, but it continued to operate east of him, and the Temple’s dispatches were less panicky than they had been. The secular lords were being slow to muster, but the Guard had stripped its garrisons throughout the eastern kingdoms to the bone, and fifty thousand men were on their way to him. Better yet, the first trains of replacement weapons had begun coming in. There were less of them than he would have liked, especially given what the heretics had captured at Yortown, but he’d already received eight thousand pikes and over five hundred joharns. If the reports from Yortown were right, the heretics had found some way to give joharns and malagors the range of rifles, which suggested final casualties would be atrocious even if the Guard managed to rearm every man, but that should be less of a factor defending entrenched positions than in the open field. They were going to have to find some reply to the heretics’ weight of fire in the future, and Ortak was already considering ways to increase the ratio of firearms to pikes, but for the moment he had a stopper in the bottle and the heretics seemed unwilling to take the losses to remove it.
He sighed and shook himself. The light was going, and he had more than enough paperwork waiting to keep him up half the night. At least his quarters in Erastor were better than a tent in the field, he told himself, and smiled wryly as he turned and called for his branahlk.
Sean MacIntyre dismounted and wiped rain from his face. He could have used his implants to stay dry, but that would have felt unfair to his troops, which was probably silly but didn’t change his feelings. He smiled at his own perversity and scratched his branahlk’s snout, listening to its soft whistle of pleasure, and tried to hide his worry as the sodden column squelched past.
It was taking longer than planned, and the rain was heavier than Israel’s meteorological remotes had predicted. The cold front pushing down the valley had met a warm front out of Sanku and Keldark, and Brashan’s latest forecast warned of at least twenty hours of hard rain, probably with thunderstorms. They would make the ground still softer and the going harder, and they were also going to deepen the fords at Malz, but at least it didn’t look as if the Mortan would reach critical depths. Or, he thought grimly, not yet.
Tibold splashed up on his own branahlk and drew up beside him.
“Captain Juahl’s reached the bivouac area, Lord Sean.” The ex-Guardsman’s tone made Sean crook an eyebrow, and Tibold sighed. “It’s under a handspan of water, My Lord.”
“Great.” Sean closed his eyes and inhaled deeply, then flipped his fold com up to Sandy’s hovering cutter. “Got a problem down here,” he subvocalized. “Our bivouac site’s underwater.”
“Damn. Hang on a sec,” she replied, and brought up her sensors, berating herself for not having checked sooner. She frowned in concentration over her neural feed as she swept the area ahead of the column, then her eyes brightened. “Okay. If you push on another six klicks, the ground rises to the south.”
“Firewood?” he asked hopefully.
” ’Fraid not,” she replied, and he sighed.
“Thanks anyway.” He turned to Tibold. “Tell Juahl he’ll find higher ground if he bears a bit south and keeps moving for another hour or so.”
“At once, Lord Sean.” Tibold didn’t even ask how his commander knew that; he simply turned his branahlk and splashed off into the gathering gloom, and Sean leaned back against his own mount and sighed.