The Tide of Victory by Eric Flint and David Drake

Far easier to behead a man than to do his work for him, after all. A point which the old man had demonstrated by beheading, on the spot, the one Malwa officer who had raised a protest.

Thereafter, the Malwa prisoners had set to work with a will—and none more so than the officers who commanded them. Abbu had also explained that he was a firm believer in the chain of command. Far easier to behead a single officer, after all, than twenty men in his charge. A point which the old man had demonstrated by beheading, the next day, the Malwa officer whose unit had done a pitiful day’s work.

Under other circumstances, Belisarius might have restrained Abbu’s ferocious methods. But siege warfare was the grimmest and cruelest sort of war, and now that he had put the arch stone of his entire daring campaign into place, he would take no chances of seeing it slip. So long as Belisarius could hold the area within the fork of the Indus and the Chenab—the “Iron Triangle,” as his men were beginning to call it—the Malwa would have no choice but to retreat from the Sind entirely. Belisarius would be in the best possible position to launch another war of maneuver once his forces recuperated and were refitted. He would have bypassed the Sukkur bottleneck entirely and opened the Punjab for the next campaign. The Punjab, the “land of five rivers,” where all the advantages of terrain would lie with him and not his enemy. And he would have saved untold Roman lives in the process—even Malwa lives, when all was said and done.

If he could hold the Iron Triangle long enough to relieve the pressure on Khusrau and Ashot at Sukkur and allow a reliable supply route to become established on the Indus, using Menander’s little fleet of steam-powered warships to clear the way.

One challenge to him having been beaten off, another immediately came to fore. One of the telegraphs in a corner of the large bunker began chattering. Seconds later, as he leaned over the telegraph operator’s shoulder and read the message the man was jotting down, Belisarius began issuing new orders.

“The Malwa are trying to land troops in that little neck of land at the very tip of the Triangle,” he announced. “Eight boats, carrying thousands of men.”

Then, straightening and turning around: “We’ll use the Thracians for this, Maurice. Give the Greeks a rest. See to it.”

Maurice snatched his helmet from a peg and hustled toward the bunker’s entrance, shouting over his shoulder at Sittas: “You Greeks won’t get all the glory this day! Ha! Watch how Thracians do it, you sorry excuses for cataphracts! You’ll be crying in your wine before nightfall, watch and see if . . .” The rest trailed off as the chiliarch passed through the entrance into the covered trench beyond.

Sittas smirked. “Poor bastard. I guess he doesn’t know yet that the wine’s all gone. My Greeks finished the last of it yesterday. Come nightfall, when they’re wanting to celebrate, his precious Thracians will be drinking that homemade beer the Malwa civilians—I mean, Punjabi civilians—are starting to brew up.” He stuck out his tongue. “I tried some. Horrible stuff.”

Belisarius gave no more than one ear to Sittas’ cheerful rambling. Most of his attention was concentrated on the map, gauging the other forces he could bring to bear if Maurice ran into difficulty. His principal reserve, with the Thracians thrown into action, were the two thousand cataphracts which Cyril had under his command. Those “old Greeks” hadn’t participated in Sittas’ charge. Belisarius trusted their discipline far more than he did those of Sittas’ men, and so he had put them in charge of the small city which was being erected in the very center of the Iron Triangle. A city, not so much in the sense of construction—its “edifices” were the most primitive huts and tents imaginable—but in population. Over twenty-five thousand Punjabi civilians were huddled there, along with Cyril’s men and half of Abbu’s Arabs. Already, Belisarius’ combat engineers were working frantically to design and oversee the construction of a crude sanitation system to forestall—hopefully—the danger of epidemic which siege warfare always entailed.

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