The Tide of Victory by Eric Flint and David Drake

Belisarius managed not to sigh. Barely. “Welcome to the Iron Triangle, Justinian.”

“Thank you.” The blind man, who had been many things in his life, but none he seemed to enjoy so much as being an artisan, cocked his head quizzically. “Tell me something, Belisarius. Are you glad to see me?”

Belisarius thought about it, for a moment. His thought processes were helped along by Aide.

Don’t be a complete idiot.

“Yes,” he said. “I am delighted to see you here. We’re going to need you badly, I suspect, before this is all over.”

An emperor and his realm

“The actual shipyard, of course, will be moved to Barbaricum,” explained Justinian. He leaned back in his chair and placed the drained cup on a nearby table, moving in the slightly deliberate manner of a blind man. “Your local beer’s not bad, if you ask me. No worse than what you get in Egypt or Axum.”

Belisarius frowned. “To Barbaricum? Why not keep it in Adulis?” He started to make a waving motion with his hand, until he remembered the gesture wouldn’t be seen. “I can understand the advantages of having it closer, but—moving all those artisans and shipbuilders, most of them Ethiopian—”

“Oh, stop fussing at me!” snapped Justinian. “By now, I do believe I know a lot more about this than you do. The disruption will only be temporary, and after that we’ll save a lot more time by having much closer contact with the shipyard. Instantaneous contact, once the telegraph lines are laid all the way through.”

The former emperor leaned forward, gesticulating with energy. “You do understand, don’t you, that the Malwa will already have started building ironclad riverboats? Ha! Wait till they see what I’m planning to build to counter them!”

Belisarius was still frowning. “That’s going to cause some trouble with Khusrau . . .”

“Trouble?” demanded Justinian. “Say better—an imperial tempest. The Ethiopians are going to demand that Barbaricum be made an Axumite enclave. Ethiopian territory, pure and simple—just like Chowpatty.”

Makes sense, said Aide. Between Barbaricum and Chowpatty—they’ll probably want a piece of Gujarat, too, before this is all over—the Axumites will have—”

“Impossible!” proclaimed Belisarius.

“Oh, nonsense,” replied Justinian airily. “The Axumites can certainly claim to be entitled to it, after all they’ve sacrificed for Persia.”

Yes, they can. Greedy damned Persians! Wanting everybody to rescue them and then trying to grab everything at the same time. The least they can do for Axum is give them Barbaricum. Of course—

Belisarius could feel a diplomatic pit opening beneath him. The fury of the Aryan emperor—naturally, he would have to be the one to negotiate with Khusrau—

—I can see why Khusrau will be a mite testy. The Persians are a trading nation, unlike the Indians, and so they won’t like the fact that between Chowpatty and Barbaricum—Gujarat, too, you watch—the Ethiopians will have something of a lock on trade in the Erythrean Sea.

Justinian reached into his robes—still imperial purple, whatever else might have changed—and pulled out a bound scroll. “Besides, you don’t have a lot of choice. Antonina was just arriving in Adulis when I was about to leave. Once we had a chance to talk—my plans for a closer shipyard, her plans for a stable transition in Axum—she wrote this for you. Lays out everything, as neatly as you could ask for.”

Normally, Belisarius would have been delighted to receive a letter from Antonina. But this one . . . He reached for it gingerly.

“She’s quite firm in her opinion, needless to say.”

She was, indeed. Gloomily, as he read Antonina’s letter, Belisarius could foresee furious times ahead of him. Negotiations with his Persian allies which would be almost—not quite—as ferocious as his battles with the Malwa.

Somewhere in the middle of his reading, a part of his mind noticed that Menander and Eusebius had come charging into his headquarters. (Which was still a pavilion. Permanent construction was taking place all over the Iron Triangle, but it was devoted to the necessities of war, not the creature comfort of officers. Although the Persians were starting to make noise about requiring a “suitable residence” for Khusrau, when he came to visit.) But Belisarius paid no attention to their eager words, or the way they were waving around the design sketches Justinian had brought with him. Not until Aide jolted him out of his misery.

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