Rudi spread his hands. "Sir, when would it be this right time? There's been war and rumor of war from here to the Atlantic since the Change, and I don't expect it to much improve before I'm old and gray, so."
"According to my intelligence people, it's pretty damned bad east of here-the Prophet's boys beat the Snake River Army-that's one of New Deseret's main field forces-east of Pocatello, and it'll be under siege soon. Then they'll head for Twin Falls… which is entirely too close to my border. There's fighting down in what used to be Utah, too. It's all coming apart and there are raiding parties everywhere: Corwinites, deserters from both sides, freelancers and mercenaries and gen eral road-people bandit scum. It'd be a poor payment for saving my life and my boys' to send you into that."
The companions exchanged sober glances. "That all went to hell in a handbasket woven lickety split," Ingolf said. "New Deseret was holding up pretty well when I went through last year."
Thurston held out a broad palm and turned it as if it were a seesaw on a pivot, at first slowly and then with a snap.
"They spread themselves too thin and let the Cutters get inside their decision curve. Walker-he's the Prophet's main commander-is a bastard but a smart one, and he managed to mousetrap a lot of their infantry down south. Sort of a replay of Manzikert… a battle about a thousand years ago. He was army before the Change. After that he kept them rocked back on their heels and their coordination broke down. When the balance tips, things go from slow to fast real fast."
Ingolf gave a grunt and a nod, the sort you did when somebody said something you knew was true by experience. Rudi looked at him.
"Yeah, the general's right. It's like fighting one-on-one with someone who's about as good as you are; you know how that is."
Rudi made a gesture of acceptance. "Back and forth until someone makes a mistake… and they get hurt and then they can't recover and then it's all over but the last strike?"
"Yeah, that's about it, on a bigger scale. If you don't have a margin for error, error kills you."
Everyone else in his group signaled agreement. None of them had fought in a real war except Ingolf, but they'd all been in skirmishes and fights on a more personal level.
"Will you help them now, Larry?" Cecile said, surpris ing Rudi a little; she'd been very quiet during most of the dinner, and he'd pegged her as the type who did her consulting in private. "I told you we should have intervened last year."
"Yeah, I will," Thurston said absently, looking up at the ceiling. "I'd have done it earlier, if they hadn't been so damned stubborn. "
"Stubborn as you, Dad?" Frederick Thurston said.
"Just about. I should have softened my terms and they should have realized how deep the shit they were in was earlier. But if I hit the Prophet's men now, they'll still be weakened from taking out New Deseret and they won't have had a chance to consolidate. If we get lucky, we might be able to break them and take Montana and Wyoming too. And this assassination thing will keep the politics simple, thank God. They screwed up and I'm going to… ah, take advantage of it."
Then his eyes snapped back to the present. "But it's going to be a pain in the ass for you people. I regret that-I owe you seriously-but there's nothing I can do about it. I do suggest you stick around Boise for at least a little while, to see who jumps where. I'll let you have the best intelligence I can on developments."
The conversation went general after that; the Thur stons saw them to the door later. The big central enclo sure of the citadel was only half-darkened; there were crescents burning on the towers around it, and gaslights around the perimeter, and guards walking their rounds. Still, it had the sad slightly chilly horses-and-woodsmoke smell of nighttime in a fortress, and it was easy enough to halt everyone in a place where it was impossible to be overheard.
"Something smells," Rudi said bluntly.
Nobody looked like they disagreed. "That was the most counterproductive assassination attempt I've ever seen or heard of," Odard said thoughtfully.
"Guaranteed to produce just the wrong results if any thing went pear-shaped," Edain agreed. "So unless these Cutter people are stupid-"
"They aren't," Ingolf said flatly.
"By no means," Father Ignatius said. "Wicked, and I would say almost worshippers of evil in some senses, but extremely efficiently so for the most part."
"Then there's something crooked going on," one of the twins said. "Someone's angling for the Boromir Award."
"By which you mean treachery, in the common tongue," Mathilda said with heavy patience. "Is it really important to us? We're just passing through."
"We want to keep alive while we pass through, or we'll be staying-six feet under," Ritva said.
"There is that," Rudi said. "They were trying to kill us, too. And the assassination… it would probably have worked if we weren't there. But then what would they have gained, with Thurston and his sons dead? They aren't his heirs anyway, are they?"
"No," Father Ignatius said. "There's a vice president, Colonel Moore, who is an old friend of the general's and beyond suspicion. And a competent man."
"We need to get a bit of a grip on what's going on here," Rudi said. "Since we're guests… or at least it wouldn't be the wisest thing to leave right now, as it were."
Chapter Nineteen
Boise, Idaho Provisional Capital,
United States Of America
June 11-15, CY23/2021 A.D.
The practice ground occupied the clear space just inside the city wall, paved with blocks of asphalt cut from old roads. It was mostly deserted with sunset only a half hour off. Mostly…
Edain unstrung his bow and held out his hand. Six of his arrows were neatly grouped in the bull's eye and one more had been pushed three inches out by a backdraft; none of the others had come close to matching that. The sight made him a little nostalgic; it had been years since he did much shooting at a beginner's target like that.
"Here!" the Boisean cavalryman who'd proposed the match said, and slapped green bills into his hand.
He did it hard enough to sting, if Edain's hand hadn't been covered with calluses as thick as his own. As it was, there was a dull thock sound.
"Many thanks," Edain said, as several of his comrades followed suit. "And sure, anytime you feel like shooting a few again…"
Garbh rose and came over, looking up in his face and wagging her tail slightly because she sensed his enjoy ment. He'd been raised to know the value of a dollar, mostly because it represented sweat and sore muscles, often his own, and partly because even near Dun Juni per clansfolk didn't use coined money much, still less the paper kind. Bets like this were just for fun, though; found money you could waste without being guilty about it, like a prize for winning a game at a festival.
The infantrymen who'd been watching laughed, slapping one another on the back, which produced a series of tonk sounds as hard palms hit steel armor; then they started collecting their bets from the horsemen of the cavalry troop who'd shot against him, or who'd bet on those who did. It had been natural enough to fall in with them; they were all conscripts doing their term of service, and close enough to his own age.
Their grins were the reverse of the cavalry's sulks. The remaining cavalry woman smiled, though; she was Rosita Gonzales, the sergeant who'd greeted them back on the road. And she'd seen him shoot before, for real, at that.
"Notice I wasn't putting any money on you losing," she said.
"Why am I not surprised, Rosita?" he said, batting his eyelashes theatrically. "Would a lady as brave, beautiful and skilled as yourself be anything but wise? Now, if I could spend some of these fine winnings on a drink for the both of us, that would set the flower crown of spring upon my happiness, so it would."
She snorted laughter. "Yeah, try to butter me up. I'm too old for what you've got in mind, kid! Or you're too young for me."