Col Buchanan - Stands a Shadow
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- Название:Stands a Shadow
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‘Get out!’ someone else yelled with their hands cupping their mouth, but it was too late. An outer section of the curving parapet went first, men toppling out over the crumbling crenellations. He saw Captain Hull in his white scarf, waving the rest of his men back towards the stairwell – and then the whole balcony fell away in a crashing spilling roar, with Hull and the others tumbling amongst it.
A cry rose from the far shore. The Imperials baying in victory.
Halahan closed his eyes for a moment. Slowly he wiped his stubbled face with hands grown numb from the cold. He hadn’t slept in two nights now. With a growl he turned his back on the scene and tried to think through his fugue of fatigue and anger. The rest of the men were watching him, ready to run at the first command.
He gave a single nod of his head.
The Greyjackets began to grab up their gear and dart for the stairwell.
In the street below, rifle shots were whining overhead or skipping off the walls of the gatehouse. His men scattered to their secondary fire-positions in the surrounding buildings. Red Guards were still manning the streets behind the cover of makeshift barriers.
Halahan ran across Sergeant Jay as he jogged over the smashed gates.
‘We’re falling back to our secondary positions,’ he called out to the sergeant.
‘Any word yet on when we’re being relieved?’
They both jumped over a line of rubble, Halahan holding onto his straw hat.
‘Our orders remain the same, Staff Sergeant. We hold this position until the morning.’
The sergeant glanced at him sidelong.
‘I know, old timer,’ said Halahan. ‘I know.’
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
A Meeting of Diplomats
Che had forgotten he was playing a game of rash, so drunk was he by then.
It was the girl’s fault, Curl with the pretty face who conversed with him occasionally as she played or laughed at one of his jokes, but who mostly just shared her large wineskin of Keratch while pretending not to be interested in him. Che drank until the noise of the taverna became something muted, distant, unreal, and he fell ever deeper into himself.
At some point, Koolas and the rest of the players gave up trying to jeer him back to life. Instead, they lifted him – chair and all – away from the table so that another could take his place. ‘Get away,’ he drawled at them, but they paid him no heed.
Che’s head was pounding. He couldn’t recall a time he had drunk as much as this. For a while he simply sat in his chair while something tried to push its way out of his neck. He swiped at it, but the throbbing sensation refused to go away.
They had seated him at an empty table, it seemed. He saw a mug in front of him, filled with water, and he drank it down gratefully.
He found himself leaning to one side as though his balance was adjusting to a tilted world. The motion was checked by someone’s shoulder. It was the girl, sitting next to him.
‘Come back with me,’ he heard himself say into her ear.
‘And why would I want to do that?’ she teased.
He tried to focus on the words he needed to say. ‘Because,’ he began, ‘I’d like you to.’
A press of a knee against his own.
‘We can get a room here,’ the girl suggested. ‘Have some food sent up. You look as though you could do with some.’
The girl helped him to his feet, and then he stood there swaying as she wandered off for a moment. When she returned she was smiling. ‘This way,’ she said, and led him towards a set of stairs lit by a single flickering lamp.
Someone whistled behind them and shouted words of encouragement. He glanced back but couldn’t see who it was.
He failed to notice the two figures stepping into the taverna, a man and a woman dressed in civilian clothing, their shaven heads covered by felt hats, their hard stares fixed upon him.
Through the eyeglass, Archgeneral Sparus watched a pair of skyships taking off from the heart of Tume, Red Guards standing along the rails, their cloaks blowing in the breeze as the vessels lifted ponderously into the air. He snapped the eyeglass together and handed it to the officer closest to him, Captain Skayid. So it was true: Creed was evacuating the fighting men from Tume now.
Sparus knew that the Lord Protector would be one of the last to leave the floating city, and, knowing that, he was pushing the bridge rebuilding effort hard.
He was loath to allow the man to escape once again. He wanted Creed alive; he wanted very dearly to set his best people to work on him. They would break him, as they broke everyone, with narcotics and mind games and carefully applied measures of pain, until Creed was nothing more than a wreck of a man, malleable to all that they demanded of him…
It had become his favoured fantasy, ever since the aftermath of the battle and the Khosians’ close escape. The Lord Protector, chained and naked in a cage and renouncing aloud all he had ever stood for, while Sparus paraded him in front of the walls of Bar-Khos for the Khosians to witness what had befallen their great war leader.
Perhaps Creed could even join Lucian as another living trophy. That would be only fitting, Sparus mused. In defeat, the Lagosian insurgency had shown itself to be nothing more than another reckless folly. Soon now, the defiance of Khos and the Free Ports would become a fallacy too; the battles of Coros, Chey-Wes and the Shield would be remembered as the last bright moments of a people stuck stubbornly in the past, futile attempts at denying the new world order.
Sparus didn’t doubt this, for he had seen it time and time again. While the scholars liked to quip about victors writing the books of history, Sparus knew that it went much deeper than that. It was victory itself which shaped the history in people’s minds, which showed the righteousness of a cause and the mistaken beliefs of those who had been defeated. Victory had power in it, while defeat… defeat was nothing but a husk, quickly discarded save for what seeds lay within it, those hopes of future triumphs.
When Mann finally conquered the Free Ports, and then the lands of the Alhazii, it would be the end of the contest of the ages, the contest of beliefs. And the victory itself would be the proof of Mann’s righteousness.
Still, he had a personal score to settle with this man first, this Lord Protector who had made him look the fool twice now, first with his night attack, and then with his unexpected escape from the field. And Sparus knew precisely how he was going to achieve it.
‘Colonel Kunse,’ he said, and the colonel snapped to attention, along with the other officers around him. ‘Prepare our Commandos for a night attack. Have them build some rafts so they can get across. When it starts nearing dark, redouble the efforts on the bridge. Offer gold to attract volunteers if you have to. I want it completed tonight, not tomorrow, do you hear?’
He looked to the west with his single eye, over the imperial heavy guns that pounded away along the southern shore. Another Khosian skyship was returning just then across the lake.
‘And do something about those skyships, will you? We should be contesting the skies, not leaving them open for the Khosians to escape in good order.’
‘But our birds are still under repairs, Archgeneral.’
‘I don’t care, Colonel. If they can fly, get them in the air.’
Sparus was demanding the impossible, but he didn’t care.
‘We’ll take the city tonight, and Creed himself, while he’s still evacuating his men.’
A few of them smiled now, seeing the irony of it.
Aye, Sparus thought. Let us see how these Khosians like a taste of their own medicine.
A clatter of wooden plates jolted Che from his drunken stupor.
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