Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure
truth, thereby alleviating her acute mental conflicts, and her sufferings,
attendant upon its concealment, and by another, as she has no legal power in the
matter herself, be restored to freedom. To be sure, there are risks involved in
this sort of thing. For example, when she kneels before him, his slave, perhaps
he will then simply order her to the kitchen or to his furs. No promise made to
her has legal standing, no more than to a tarsk. In this way, she, ostensibly
seeking her freedom, may find herself plunged instead into explicit and
inescapable bondage, and will doubtless, too, soon find herself properly marked
and collared, to preclude the possible repetition of any such nonsense in the
future.
“Yes,” whispered Lady Claudia, not taking her eyes off the small figure
suspended on the spear, on the battlements over the gate.
(pg.276) I looked over the wall. The towers had now stopped, aligned, some
twenty yards or so from the wall. They would overtop it. When they advanced,
they would do so, together.
“You had best go now,” I said.
“I do not want to leave you,” she said.
“When the towers spill their troops onto the wall,” I said, “I do not thing they
will be stopping to make slaves. Go, hide. Perhaps later, when the citadel is
burning, when resistance is ended, when the blood lust has to some extent
lessened, you may receive an opportunity to strip yourself for captors.”
“What of her?” she asked, pointing to the former Lady Publia.
“The slave?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said.
“She is already stripped,” I said.
“True!” she laughed.
“You had best leave,” I said.
“You never intended to impale her, did you?”
“Not on the spear of execution,” I said.
“I see,” she said.
“Unless perhaps she might prove displeasing or in some way uncooperative.”
“I understand,” she said.
“There are, however, many other forms of impalement quite suitable for such as
she,” I said.
“Doubtless!” she laughed.
“And for you,” I said.
“Yes,” she said, “for me as well!”
“Go,” I said. “The towers will advance at any moment.”
“Why did you let us believe you would impale her?” she asked.
“Surely the genuineness of her terror added to the effectiveness of our
disguises,” I said, “as did you own authentic concern.”
“You manipulated us as women and slaves!” she said, her eyes flashing.
“And you are a clever woman,” I said, “biding your time here against my will.”
“I am a free woman,” she said. “I think I shall remain here, by your side.”
(pg.277) “Free woman or no,” I said, “I wish I had a slave whip. I would teach
you docility and compliance quickly enough.”
“And I would offer them to you without the whip,” she said, “—Master.”
“Fortunate for you that you are not a slave!”
She laughed, merrily.
“I would you were naked at my feet, in a collar,” I said, angrily.
“Ah,” she said, “I would that I were there, too, my master, but I fear that that
pleasure, if pleasure it be, seeing me so, having me so, will go not to you,
but, if luck be with me, to a Cosian.”
“That is not unfitting,” I said. “You are a traitress. You declared for Cos. It
seems not unfitting, then, that you should belong to a Cosian.
She tossed her head, angrily.
“Go,” I said.
“I do not want to go,” she said.
“I will not be able to protect you here,” I said, “nor, in a few moments, will
these others.”
“I will remain here,” she said.
“Here you will be in the way,” I said. “You would jeopardize others, concerned
for you.”
She looked at me, her eyes angry.
“Go,” I said. “You do not belong here.”
“And do you?” she asked. “You are not of Ar’s Station. You are not even of Cos!”
“Go,” I said. “The work of men is soon to be done in this place.”
She knelt down before me, though she was a free woman, and lifting her veil,
pressed her lips to my sandals.
She then lifted her head to me, tears in her eyes. “I would that I were at your
feet as a true slave, my master,” she said.
“Go,” I said.
Her eyes regarded me, piteously.
“Go,” I said. “I would, if I were you,” I said, “while any of Ar’s Station are
about, with a sword in their hand, keep my veil.”
She nodded, frightened. She then looked once more at the former Lady Publia, now
a roped slave, suspended on a spear, and then again at me, and then hurried from
the wall.
(pg.278) I then turned to look across the twenty yard or so of space between the
somber, looming towers, aligned, and the wall of the citadel. I could see cracks
in the wood. Through some of these I could see numerous shapes, on various
levels. The hides hung profusely about the outsides of the towers, especially on
the frontal surfaces, were dark with water. The ram was still pounding at the
gate.
The men on the wall, others coming up to join them from below, prepared to meet
the onslaught. Groups bunched before each tower. Others scattered down the wall
to meet the grapnel crews and the scalers, with their ladders. Weapons were
unsheathed. Tridents were readied. Buckets of oil on the long poles were
ignited.
I would have thought Aemilianus, commander of the citadel, would have come to
the wall, but I did not see the helmet with the crest of sleen hair.
It occurred to me that I had not much business here, really. This was not my
fight. I was no lover of Ar nor of Cos.
The trumpets would surely sound any moment.
The sky was calm enough, oblivious of a pending tumult beneath. The clouds would
be indifferent to the blood that would be split beneath, dark in their racing
shadows. What occurred here would surely be insignificant in the face of the
universe. What small expanse of meaning was this, compared to the magnitudes of
space? How tiny the disturbances and exertions of the afternoon must seem,
compared to the dissolution and formation of worlds, and the turmoils wrought in
the depths of incandescent orbs? Yet there was feeling and consciousness here
and they, flickering it seemed in the darkness, tiny and frail, seemed to me in
that moment to blaze in dimensions unfamiliar to the physicist, and in their own
world and way to dwarf and mock the insensate placidities of space. Should the
eye which opens on the awesomeness of the universe not apprehend as well the
awesomeness of its own seeing? In man has the universe not come to
self-consciousness, surprised that it should exist?
Where then was Aemilianus?
It was not my fight. I should go below. Surely in the citadel, somewhere, I
could find other garments. My accents could not be confused with the liquid
accents of Ar or those (pg.279) so similar, of Ar’s Station. In the ingress of
victors I should mingle with them.
It was not my fight.
Where was Aemilianus?
How dispirited seemed the defenders! How listlessly they stood! How resigned to
their fate! What preparations did they make for the towers? Did they think they
now faced only fellows on ladders, fellows climbing ropes, the clinging,
climbing, creeping, shouting swarms, stinging with spears and blades, that they
knew from a hundred trails in the past? They would be swept aside like dried
leaves before the descendent blast of Torvaldsland. Were Cosians not to know
their swords had been warmed and nicked in their romp?
“Ho, fools!” I cried, striding down the walkway. “The bridges will drop and you
will think an avalanche of iron has spilled upon you! How shall you meet it? Let
it spill on your heads? Clever fellows! Bring poles! Bring stones! You, fetch
grapnels and ropes. The crews to the catapults, now! Yes, to the engines! You
men there, you can see where this tower will come, there by the stairs. Break
away the stone there! Open a great gap! You there, bring tarn wire!”
“Who are you?” cried a man.
“One who holds this sword!” I said. “Do you want it in your gut?”
“You are not Marsias!” cried another.
“I am assuming command,” I said.
Men looked at one another, wildly.
“The wall cannot be held,” said a man.
“True,” I said. “I do not lie to you. The wall cannot be held. But what will it
cost the Cosians?”
“Much,” said a man, grimly.
“Those who have no stomach to stay,” I said, “let them hide themselves among the
women and the children below.”
“Life is precious,” said a man, “but it is not that precious.”
Suddenly there was a blast of trumpets from the foot of the wall and the eleven
towers, with a lurch and groan, began to creep forward.
“Hurry!” I cried.
“Bring stones, poles, tarn wire!” cried men.
17
Battle: We Will Withdraw to the Landing
(pg.280) The bridges of the tower were still raised. These bridges were each
about eight to ten feet in width. The towers themselves, which taper on the
sides and back for stability, but are flat on the approaching surface, to make
it possible to come flush with the wall, at that height were about fifteen feet
in width. They were out from the wall, back from it, some seven feet. The lower
sills of the bridges, from whence they would swing down, clapping, thundering,
on the crenelation, were about four or five feet above the height of the wall.
This permits a considerable momentum to the attackers without being so steep as
to endanger the surety of their footing. There was no accident about the height
of the towers. A simple geometrical calculation gives the height of the wall. We
could now hear little movement within the towers, scarcely the clink of arms.
They were, however, crowded with men.
“It is the waiting I do not like,” said a fellow near men.
I lifted and lowered my sword. Men tensed along the wall. Fires were lit.
It had taken the towers at least five Ehn to move the twenty yards or so to the
wall.
They were now here.
There are many ways of meeting such devices. The most effective, but generally
impractical, as it consumes much time and materials, is to raise the wall
itself, building it (pg.281) higher, so that they can serve as little more than
ladder platforms. What is more often done when time permits is to build portable
wooden walls, some fifteen feet or so, in height, with defensive walkways and
loopholes for missiles, which are then moved in the path of the towers. Sorties,
the object of which is to fire the towers, are less practical than it might seem
at first glance. Such towers are usually well defended, and are often not
brought into play until such excursions are for most practical purposes beyond
the resources of the defenders. Too, it is difficult to fire such objects, and
the fires began on them by, say, small task forces are generally quickly
extinguished.
At a singe blast of trumpets, the eleven bridges were loosened, rattling, to the
crenelation.
As soon as the bridges struck down on the stone, at eleven points along the
wall, from each of the somber, giant, looming, hide-hung towers, scores of men
packed within rushed forth, spewing forth, erupting, like lave or steam and
water breaking from the side of a cliff, racing, sprinting, descending the
bridges, shields set, hurling themselves downward. Poles, and pikes, and stones,
and wire, and steel and fire met them. At two of the towers great poles were
used. One, a foot thick and twenty feet in length, managed by ten men with
ropes, mounted at an angle of some twenty degrees on an improvised pivot of
heaped stone, swept the bridge an instant after it struck the crenelation, then
tumbled off, used once, to fall behind the parapet. Men, before its movement,
were struck screaming to the ground, but others followed them, pouring over the
wall, to plunge into coiled tarn wire, to stumble, to fall, to wade in it
bloodied, to meet stones and steel. The second great pole was tied to two
crosspoles and, by ten men on each crosspole, was thrust in place as soon as
that bridge fell, and was held at an angle, like a railing, its sturdy barrier
diverting the stream of attackers, causing many on the outside edge to be
buffeted by their comrades to the ground below, a hazard in crossing such a
bridge at any time under the conditions of battle. Many clung to the pole, as
they could, and many strove to slip under it or climb over it. In the cleared
angle of the bridge, the defenders mounted to the bridge itself an there, behind
the barrier, and about it, (pg.282) stanched the flow of men upward, holding
them on the planking of the bridge, between the tower and the wall.
At two of the bridges tiles and bricks, some two feet in length and six inches
in height and width, met the attackers, not so much to stay the force of the
attack as litter the bridge itself, that rushing men, not suspecting them, might
stumble and fall. And in such cases there was always the press of men from
behind, ascending the ladders, pushing the others forward. Tarn wire here, too,
was set to enmesh those who came over the wall. I had had the rear portions of
the two catapults propped up, that the angle of fire could be flattened. This,
given the height of the openings, revealed by the dropped bridges, made it