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RANKS OF BRONZE BY DAVID DRAKE

“He wasn’t carrying it outside this building, though,” said the file-closer thoughtfully, while his fingers gently kneaded the muscles of Vibulenus’ shoulder.

“The shield will remain here after this assembly,” said the Commander. “I had intended to have your fellow carry it among you himself, but I underestimated the effect our weapons would have on warriors of your — cultural level.”

“Little bastard,” whispered Clodius Afer because the Commander’s voice in his ears had hinted at amusement.

“Maybe they can’t use anything but, but maces outside this ship,” the tribune murmured to the veteran. “Maybe their gods would strike them down for violating that law.”

Though why would there be such a law?

“Almost the whole of the ship is yours to roam as you please,” continued the Commander, “except when you are summoned for training or assembly. This bulkhead —”

He stretched out one delicate, overfingered hand to tap the shifting pastels of the bulkhead behind him “—is my territory and that of my crew and guards. You are not to attempt to enter it, and you are not to approach within three feet of its surface. If you do — watch closely, now.”

Vibulenus was watching the Commander’s hands, expecting one of them to reach back for the cylinder. The blue figure did not move at all.

Two of the guards flung Pompilius Rufus toward the bulkhead.

The boy did not thump against the lighted metal because his body disintegrated in the air with a tearing crash.

The Commander winced an instant before the noise erupted behind him, and his shoulders hunched against the sauce of pulverized body spitting back into the room.

There was a barrier three feet from the visible wall. The momentum of Rufus’ body carried him against it, and the young legionary splashed across the plane of contact as if he had fallen from a high cliff. Bone and muscle, as fluid and finely divided as the blood with which they merged, squirted sideways in a vertical tapestry behind the Commander, thinning and disappearing ten or a dozen feet from the center of impact.

Occasional globules overloaded what was an almost instantaneous process of digestion. Those caused the pops and sputters that threw droplets as high as the ceiling and as far as the middle rows of men watching the demonstration.

The tribune’s forehead felt damp. He wiped it with his palm, then wiped his palm on his tunic, telling himself as he did so that it was sweat.

He felt no urge to attack the Commander. In fact, his guts were filling with ice water and his legs began shaking so violently that he was afraid he would fall down.

“This is not something I or my subordinates do, you understand,” said the Commander in the chill tones of nightmare, his words heard clearly throughout the Main Gallery despite the gasps and cries of the men assembled there. “It is something that happens automatically to anyone who steps close to the wall. Only those whose nerve patterns have been keyed into the — mechanism of the ship — can survive.”

There were smells in the air besides those of the burning shield. Partly the addition was the choking sharpness that near-striking thunderbolts left at the back of a man’s throat — but there was charred flesh in the air as well. Something lay on the floor just outside the partition between death and life which Rufus had limned with his body. Vibulenus could not be sure, but he thought it was the heel of one of the boy’s feet, sheared off because it did not have quite enough momentum to carry it across the barrier on its own.

“Now,” the blue figure concluded, pausing for a perfect smile toward the assembly which stirred like a wheatfield in a fitful breeze. “Go and relax. We are already under way to a new engagement.”

“What’s he mean by that?” Clodius Afer demanded querulously. He gave Vibulenus a rough shake in an attempt to get his attention. “We can’t be going anywhere. We’d hear it. Wouldn’t we? Sir?”

The Commander turned and manipulated the hexagon on the wall. The invisible barrier did not affect him, except that one of his feet slipped a trifle in the slime Rufus had left at the demarcation line. Light twinkled within the hexagon and the door drifted open. His bodyguard, pair by pair, shuffled through the portal behind him.

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Categories: David Drake
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