Kingslayer (11 page)

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Authors: Honor Raconteur

Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction, #military adventure

BOOK: Kingslayer
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Navid had a glint in his eyes that spoke of troublemaking. He apparently liked this plan. “Give a word to a shade finder, and you’ll have sacks of cats by night’s first bell.”

Shade finder being some form of informer? Darius wasn’t quite sure of that, but clearly Navid knew how to approach this, which meant he was the right man for the job. “Since you apparently know who to talk to and how this works, I’ll let you handle it. When the cats are collected, can you have your Night Raiders sneak them onto a few surviving supply wagons?”

“Cats instead of supplies?” Ramin stared at the map thoughtfully. “Sir, that’s evil.”

“You say that, Ramin, but you’re smiling.”

“Because I can picture it in my mind, sir.” He gave a regretful sigh. “What I wouldn’t give to watch as those poor hungry souls open the wagons for food only to get angry cats.”

Darius had to admit, the mental picture had a certain appeal to it. He might fantasize about it more during that interminable dinner tonight. But for now, he had to stay focused. “Navid?”

His taciturn commander gave a simple nod of the head.

“Good.” Darius turned to the next item. “Sego suggested that we do a little propaganda. I want flyers made stating that I am now the lead general and that any man that wishes to change sides will be welcome. Put it in as many languages as you can think of.”

Kaveh caught the implications first and let out a low, admiring whistle. “That will be a heavy blow to morale, sir.”

Indeed it would be. Darius was the only general that’d come anywhere close to conquering Niotan. He also had more experience than General Jahangir, who’d basically gotten to the rank he had because of family connections. Hearing that they would now go
against
Darius would be a huge psychological blow.

“It will demoralize them, but it won’t make them go away,” Ramin pointed out. He lost his energy for a moment and some of his exhaustion seeped into his expression. “Granted, it
will
make them easier to fight.”

“We don’t need to defeat all twelve thousand,” Darius corrected. His commanders looked at him, clearly not sure if they could believe this or not. With a shake of the head and a sad smile, he explained quietly. “We don’t need to kill them all. We just need them to retreat. Do you know? The easiest army in the world to demoralize and defeat is the conquering force. The defending force is much harder to defeat because they have so much they are fighting
for
—if they fall, their homes and family are in jeopardy. But the conquering force is only marching on orders, with vague ideas of power and glory. If we can defeat them here—” Darius tapped his forehead with his index finger “—then they will quickly give up and yearn for home. A man with no fighting spirit is easily persuaded to retreat.”

Kaveh and Navid looked sold on this idea but Ramin clearly wasn’t sure. He just didn’t want to contradict a superior officer out loud.

Darius reached out and clapped him on the shoulder, a smirk on his face. “Tell you what, Ramin, I’ll make a bet with you. Two thousand Brindisi soldiers will desert their posts before the first day of battle is over.”

Those dark eyes lit up in anticipation. Ramin, apparently, was a betting man. “If I win, sir, you have to take me to a formal dinner.”

That would have been Darius’s idea of a
punishment
, actually, but to each their own. “And if I win, you are my errand boy on your next day of rest.”

Ramin stuck out his hand with a fierce smile of anticipation and challenge. Darius clasped the hand firmly to seal the deal.

“But isn’t two thousand deserters a bit too many for the first day?” Kaveh objected.

“The barbarian forces number about two thousand,” Darius informed him cheerfully.

Ramin’s eyes shot wide. He had apparently not realized just how many barbarians there were in that army. “Sir!”

Darius shook his head with a genial smile on his face. “A bet’s a bet, Commander.”

“But sir, with the cats, of course they’ll run!”

“You should have asked more questions.” Cheerfully ignoring Ramin’s wail of protest, he went back to his plans. “Navid, after you see to the cats, talk with your Night Raiders. I want them to go into the enemy’s camp every night and hassle them. Tell them to bring me their ideas and their plans of approach. I’ll have other tactics in play during the night, and I don’t want anyone taken down by their own allies.”

Navid gave a nod and started jotting down notes to himself.

“Kaveh, you and Sego deal with the propaganda. I don’t care how it’s delivered, but make sure that most of the troops over there can read it.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Ramin, I want you to contact everyone in Niotan and offer them this bounty: if they can defeat an officer and bring me proof of it, then I will reward them.” He thought about it for a moment before adding, “Tell them they must bring me either the officer’s helmet, insignia, or sword. No, make it at least two of those three.” Otherwise there would be people who would quickly steal something in the heat of battle without actually earning the reward. Darius wanted those officers taken care of first.  If the sub-commanders were disposed of, the men would be unsure of what to do. Especially in that hodge-podge army. They’d retreat by default. Almost as an afterthought he ordered, “That’s
including
army personnel.”

Everyone at the table froze and gave him incredulous looks. Bounties like this normally excluded the army, as any soldier worth his salt would naturally try to take down the officers of the enemy. But Darius didn’t prescribe to the theory that rewards should be withheld from men that were bound by duty. Besides, his position as lead general was very precarious with the men. If he showed that he was generous, they might view him more favorably. He needed to win their loyalty somehow and he was not above using bribes to do it.

Ramin scratched at that too-bright hair of his, gave his general an odd look, but dutifully jotted this down. “Yes, sir.”

Alright, what next? “Kaveh, are the engineers ready to build our barricades?”

“Yes, sir. They reported to me that they’ve done as much prep work as they can. They think they can assemble the barricades quickly once we’re there. Say, two days or so altogether. The watchtowers are ready to roll out at any time.”

Excellent. That was one worry off his mind. Most of Niotan’s troops were already on the front line, keeping the army at bay with any tactic they could think of. Darius would be bringing little more than relief troops and crews of engineers with him. The trick would be rearranging the troops once he arrived in order for his tactics to be the most effective.

They weren’t quite ready to leave but it had to be soon. “Gentlemen, we march out the day after tomorrow at sun rise. Will you be ready?”

He got firm voices of assent from around the table. Satisfied, he blew out a breath and stood up. “Then this meeting is dismissed.”

~~~

The problem with being a general was the political obligations that came hand in hand with the job. Maneuvering through a formal court demanded the same amount of ingenuity, intelligence, and strategy as being on a battlefield. The sole difference between the two being that Darius couldn’t stab anyone when they said something he didn’t like. Unfortunately.

But he knew better than to try to avoid the political nature of the job. It was politics, after all, that’d led him to being a wanted man with a significant bounty on his head. So even though he was on the eve of battle, he went to the formal dinner that night and even lingered for a while afterward, mixing with his new peers.

Or at least trying to.

Sego had called it correctly when he said that no one here knew how to react to Darius yet. They weren’t quite avoiding him, but they didn’t engage either. They were deliberately standing so that their backs were to him or they stood in profile. The more daring ones stole glances at him and whispered behind their hands to their neighbors. The others kept their backs rigidly to him in an obvious rebuff of his presence. Darius looked around the room in a slow motion. For a formal court, it was not a large space, although with the open glass doors on either end, it appeared expansive. Some brave soul had climbed up and lit the wall sconces all along the edge of the ceiling, which illuminated the area and made the gilded decorations on the wall glow softly.

For a small country, there were not many in the aristocratic class, perhaps three hundred or so. Darius, after a quick count, estimated that most of them were in this room, with perhaps two dozen or so absent. Putting over two hundred and fifty people in this space made it tight quarters, and yet he could stretch out both arms without hitting anyone. There were a great many guards as well. He had Bohme with him just to prevent someone putting a dagger into his back. But what were they afraid of? The people that didn’t have a bodyguard hovering in their shadow were visibly armed. In a formal setting he found that…odd. For such a crowd, they were strangely quiet as well. It sounded like a subdued beehive in here. The Brindisi court could be so loud at moments as to be deafening, so this relative quiet struck him as very strange.

Turning to Bohme, he muttered, “Are they normally like this with newcomers or is it just me?”

“Jusht you, shir,” Bohme assured him dryly.

Wonderful. Now, how did he go about winning them over? He
had
to make friends; it would be political suicide otherwise. If he wanted to actually live a fulfilling life here after the war had ended, he needed to establish himself now. But he’d never faced this situation before and didn’t know enough about the culture to try blindly striking out on his own.

Where was Sego when he needed him? Surely the packing could wait another hour!

“General,” a very familiar female voice called from the side.

Darius turned sharply and relaxed to finally see one friendly face in the crowd. “Raja Morva, I am delighted to see you.”

Morva looked remarkably similar to her sister, Tailli. The elder of the two daughters, she had already been married when Darius took her hostage, and at the time had been three months pregnant. She had gained a few pounds since he last saw her—no doubt a side effect of having children—but her heart-shaped face had the same beauty to it and her smile was just as infectious. At her side stood another familiar face, Heydar, her husband. He had been the one to come and collect his wife and her family at the exchange. Darius had only passed a few words with him at the time, but the man had been sincerely thankful to see his wife unharmed and had not tried any tricks when Darius withdrew and returned to the front lines. He barely remembered what the man looked like from that brief encounter, but it didn’t seem he’d changed much. Still a little stocky, black hair untamable, expression in a semi-permanent smile. The smile widened as he exchanged a short bow with Darius.

“Tailli told me all about your arrival here,” Morva informed him. “I am
so
glad that you came to us for sanctuary.”

That was not
quite
how he arrived…ah well. “I am very thankful to your sister, as well, for giving me Bohme. I’d be quite lost without him.”

For some reason, Morva laughed softly. “Apparently I should think about giving you a gift as well. You do give the most
wonderful
gifts in return. Wherever did you find that vase? It’s remarkable.”

“Sego,” Darius admitted with spread hands. “The man knows where to shop. Or at least, he knows who to ask before shopping. We found that in the space of an hour.”

“I must ask him, then.” Morva stepped in a little closer and lowered her voice to a confidential tone. “Forgive me, General, but you seem at a loss in this crowd.”

“I don’t know the players,” he admitted frankly in the same low tone. “And I’m afraid of making some unforgivable mistake because I don’t understand this culture.”

“Perhaps a guide would help?” she offered, extending one hand in invitation.

He once again thanked the gods that he had met this family. It seemed that every time he needed them, they did a good turn for him. “I would be most grateful.”

“Then come with me.”

Darius followed in her wake but couldn’t resist trying to tease a little. Catching Heydar’s eye he murmured, “She really wants that vase, doesn’t she?”

The man blinked at him, startled, and then snickered.

Morva shot them a questioning look over her shoulder. “What’s funny?”

“Nothing, my love.” Heydar straightened his face out into a bland expression.

“Hmmm?” When she didn’t get a straight answer, she shrugged and turned back around, continuing to weave her way through the throng.

With his wife’s attention safely elsewhere, Heydar nodded confirmation to Darius. “Green, if you can manage it.”

Darius raised a hand to his left shoulder and tapped it in a mocking salute. “Consider it done.”

 

 

Darius raised a hand to shield his eyes from the unrelenting rays of the sun. As was typical of the late spring season of Niotan, the desert was a hotbed of sand. The heat had such intensity that the naked eye could see it in waves across the flatland. From the back of a horse, he could see for miles in every direction. The ground here had a light coating of sand but had a baked hardness underneath with a smattering of strange cactus trees here and there. This desolate flatland stretched for quite some distance without any variation until it reached the Songhor Mountains on the northern border and the sand dunes to the south. Thank the gods that they had marched out this morning in the pre-dawn hours, when the day still had some trace of coolness to it. Marching in this kind of heat for four days only to instantly engage in battle upon their arrival would have been murder.

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