FORTUNE’S STROKE BY ERIC FLINT DAVID DRAKE

And let’s not get too romantic about the Geneva Convention and the supposedly civilized standards of future wars, either, remarked Aide. They won’t prevent entire cities being destroyed, with their populations. Purely for “strategic reasons,” of course. What difference does that make, to mangled children in the ruins of Coventry? Or to thousands of Korean slave laborers incinerated at Hiroshima?

Kurush was pointing with his beard again, this time to the west.

“The emperor has instructed me to defend Ctesiphon, while he retreats to Babylon. I will have ten thousand men. That should be enough to hold our capital city, for a few months. Damodara does not have siege guns.”

Kurush turned his eyes to Belisarius. There was nothing in the Persian’s gaze beyond a matter-of-fact acceptance of reality.

“In the end, of course,” he said calmly, “we will be doomed. Unless your thrust strikes home.”

Belisarius smiled crookedly. “It is said that an army marches on its belly, you know. I will do my best to drive a lance into the great gut of Malwa, once you have drawn the shield away.”

Kurush chuckled. “‘An army marches on its belly,'” he repeated. “That’s clever! I don’t recognize the saying, though. Who came up with it?”

Good move, genius, said Aide sourly. This will be entertaining, watching you explain to a sixth-century Persian how you came to quote Napoleon.

Belisarius ignored the quip. “I heard it from a Hun. One of my mercenaries, during my second campaign in the trans-Danube. I was rather stunned, actually, to find such a keen grasp of logistics in the mind of a barbarian. But it just goes to show—”

Father of lies, father of lies. It’s a good thing my lips are sealed, so to speak. The stories I could tell about you! They’d make even Procopius’ Secret History look like sober, reasoned truth.

* * *

Lord Damodara leaned back in his chair, studying Narses’ scowling face.

“So what is it that bothers you, exactly?” he asked the eunuch.

“Everything!” snapped Narses. The old Roman glared around the interior of the pavilion, as if searching its unadorned walls for some nook or cranny in which truth lay hidden.

“None of what Belisarius is doing makes any sense,” stated Narses. “Nothing. Not from the large to the small.”

“Explain,” commanded Damodara. The lord waved his pudgy little hand in a circular motion. The gesture included himself and the tall figure of the Rajput king seated next to him. “In simple words, that two simpletons like myself and Rana Sanga can understand.”

The good-humored quip caused even Rana Sanga to smile. Even Narses, for that matter, and the old eunuch was not a man who smiled often.

“As to the ‘large,’ ” said Narses, “what is the purpose of these endless maneuvers that Belisarius is so fond of?” The eunuch leaned forward, emphasizing his next words. “Which are not, however—and cannot be—truly endless. There is no way he can stop you from reaching Mesopotamia. The man’s not a fool. That must be as obvious to him, by now—” Narses jabbed a stiff finger toward the pavilion’s entrance “—as it is to the most dim-witted Ye-tai in your army.”

“He’s bought time,” remarked Sanga.

Narses made a sour face. “A few months, at most. It’s not been more than eight weeks since the battle of the pass, and you’ve already forced him almost out of the Zagros. Your army is much bigger than his. You can defeat him on an open battlefield, and you’ve proven that you can maneuver through these mountains as well as he can. Within a month, perhaps six weeks, he’ll have to concede the contest and allow you entry into Mesopotamia. At which point he’ll have no choice but to fort up in Ctesiphon or Peroz-Shapur, anyway. So why not do it now?”

“I don’t think it’s odd,” countered Damodara. “He’s used the months that he kept us tied up in the Zagros to good advantage, according to our spies. That general of his that he left in charge of the Roman forces in Mesopotamia—the crippled one, Agathius—has been working like a fiend, these past months. By the time we get to Ctesiphon, or Peroz-Shapur, he’ll have the cities fortified beyond belief. Cannons and gunpowder have been pouring in from the Roman armories, while we’ve been countermarching all over these damned mountains.”

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