That worry led to another. Supplies. They were starting to get low again. Not so much in terms of food as gunpowder. Even with the Malwa gunpowder which Sittas’ men would have captured in their sally this day . . .
Belisarius’ train of thought was cut short by another burst of chatter from the telegraph. This time, he charged out of the bunker himself as soon as he read enough of the message to understand the drift. After Sittas read it, the big Greek nobleman came fast on his heels.
* * *
“No glory for you today!” Sittas cheerfully informed Maurice, as soon as he trotted his horse alongside the Thracian’s. “Just as well, really. You would have been so disappointed by the libation cup.”
Maurice, perhaps oddly, didn’t seem discomfited in the least. “I don’t think the local beer is really all that bad,” he said. “I’ve tried it already. No worse than the stuff a Thracian villager grows up with, after all.” The chiliarch stroked his gray beard complacently. “We Thracians are a lot tougher than you pampered Constantinople Greeks, you know. What’s more to the point, we’re also a lot smarter.”
He pointed to the three Malwa ships drifting down the Indus, wreathed in flame and smoke. Five others could be seen frantically trying to reach the opposite bank. “Let Eusebius and his artisans do all the work, what we say. Charging into battle on a horse—all that damned armor and equipment—is too much like farm labor. Hot, sweaty, nasty business, when you get right down to it.”
“That last one’s not going to make it,” opined Gregory. The artillery commander was perched on his own horse on Maurice’s left, opposite Sittas. “Anyone want to make it a wager?”
Sittas was known to be an inveterate gambler. But, after a moment’s pause while he gauged the situation, the Greek nobleman shook his head firmly. “I don’t know enough about these newfangled gadgets to figure out the odds. But since Eusebius is a Greek artisan—best in the world!—I don’t think I’ll take the bet. He’ll catch it, you watch.”
* * *
Five minutes later, Eusebius did catch the trailing ship. Another spout of hellfire gushed from the Victrix, and yet another Malwa would-be landing craft became a scene of hysterical fear and frenzy, as hundreds of Malwa soldiers stripped off their armor and plunged into the river.
Those who could swim started making their way toward the west bank of the Indus. The others—perhaps half of them—floundered helplessly in the water. Most of them would drown. Those who survived did so only because they were close enough to the lines which the Victrix’s sailors tossed from the stern to be towed ashore into Roman captivity.
“Reminds me of fishing,” mused Maurice. “A good catch, that. Maybe we’ll be able to get enough latrines dug to stave off an epidemic after all.”
* * *
Belisarius took no part in that exchange. He had ridden his horse directly to the pier which his combat engineers had started erecting from the first day the Iron Triangle was seized. Even the pier itself was still unfinished, much less the massive armored “sheds” which Belisarius had ordered built to provide shelter from enemy fire for the Roman warships once they arrived. But enough of it was in place to allow Menander and his barges to start offloading.
“We lost most of the gunpowder and shot,” Menander confessed, as soon as he came ashore. “Their damned fortress in the gorge did for that. We’ll need to take that, as soon as possible, or we’ll probably lose supplies on every trip. Might even lose the Justinian.”
The news about the gunpowder was of some concern to Belisarius, but not much. “We’ll have enough gunpowder to get by, through at least two more major assaults. Maybe three. By that time, hopefully, the Photius will have brought more supplies. But there’s no chance at all of the Justinian being sunk—not by that fortress, at least. You’re staying here, Menander. You and Eusebius both. With the Justinian and the Victrix here, the Malwa have no chance at all of bypassing the fortified lines across the neck of the Triangle with an amphibious attack.”