The Tide of Victory by Eric Flint and David Drake

Cease fire was the last order they had been expecting to blow. But, seeing Belisarius’ glare, they obeyed with alacrity.

Startled, Gregory and his artillerymen lifted their heads. Belisarius swore under his breath.

“Not you, Gregory! You keep firing! I want the cataphracts to hold their fire!”

Gregory nodded and went back to his work. Sittas, meanwhile, started trotting—then cantering—his horse toward Belisarius. Seeing him come, Belisarius didn’t know whether to scowl or smile. He had no doubt at all that Sittas was going to protest the order.

But, to his surprise, when Sittas pulled up his horse the big man was smiling broadly.

“I was going to chew your head off—respectfully, of course—until I figured it out.” He hefted himself up in the stirrups and studied the Malwa. Another volley of cannon fire ripped them again.

“You’ve got no intention of finishing them off, do you?” The question was obviously rhetorical. “Which means we wouldn’t be able to recover our arrows. No small problem, with our light supply train, if we use up too many this early in the campaign.”

It had been a long time since Belisarius had actually been on campaign with his barrel-chested friend. Sittas looked so much like a boar—and acted the part, often enough—that Belisarius had half-forgotten how intelligent the man was underneath that brawler’s appearance.

“No, I’m not. At close quarters, we’ll suffer casualties, no matter how badly they’re battered. There’s no purpose to that, not with almost the whole campaign still ahead of us.” For a moment, he studied the enemy. “That army’s finished, Sittas. By the end of the day, what’s left of that mass of men will be of no military value to the Malwa for weeks. Or months. That’s good enough.”

Sittas nodded. “Pity not to finish ’em off. But, you’re right. Cripple ’em and be done with it. We’ve got other fish to fry and”—he glanced up at the sun—”at this rate we can still manage to make another few miles before making camp.”

He gave the bleeding Malwa his own scrutiny. Then, with a grimace: “No way we want to camp anywhere near this place. Be like sleeping next to an abattoir.”

* * *

For the next half an hour, Belisarius forced himself to watch the butchery. Eight more volleys were fired in that time. That rate of fire could not be maintained indefinitely, since firing such cannons more than ten shots per hour over an extended period ran the risk of having them become deformed or even burst from overheating. But against such a compact and massed target, eight volleys was enough. More than enough.

For Belisarius, too, this was the first time he had been able to see with his own eyes the incredible effectiveness of field artillery under the right conditions. He had planned for it—he wouldn’t have made the gamble this whole campaign represented without that presumption—but, still . . .

Gustavus Adolphus’ guns broke the imperialists at Breitenfeld, said Aide softly. And those men in that riverbed are neither as tough nor as well led as Tilly’s were.

Belisarius nodded. Then sighed. But said nothing.

I know. There are times you wish you could have been a blacksmith.

Belisarius nodded; sighed; said nothing.

By the end of that half-hour, Belisarius decided to break off the battle. There was no point in further butchery, and the Malwa soldiers were finally beginning to escape from the trap in any event. By now, corpses had piled so high in the riverbed that men were able to clamber over them and find refuge on the steep, opposite bank. Abbu and his Arabs were no longer there to drive them back. Belisarius had pulled them back, fearing that some of the light cavalry might be accidentally hit by misaimed Roman cannons—as he and Agathius’ cataphracts had been at the battle of Anatha, by Maurice’s rocket fire.

Most of the killing was done by the big guns, but not all of it. Twice, early on, bold and energetic Malwa officers succeeded in organizing sallies. One sally charged down the riverbed toward the Thracian bucellarii, the other upstream against Sittas’ Greeks. Both were driven back easily, with relatively few casualties for the armored horsemen.

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