“Closer, damn you!” bellowed John.
* * *
A few miles further south along the Indus delta, Belisarius had a dazzling view of the battle which was taking shape in Barbaricum’s harbor. At the distance, of course, he couldn’t see any of the details. Not even with his telescope. But the visual and auditory display was truly magnificent. Which, when all was said and done, was the whole point of the exercise. Whatever damage John and the Ethiopians succeeded in inflicting on the Malwa at Barbaricum, the true purpose of that bombardment was to divert attention from Belisarius’ doings.
“All right, General,” growled Valentinian. “You can stop smiling so damned crookedly. I admit that you were right and I was wrong.” Sourly: “Again.”
In the darkness, there was no way Valentinian could have spotted that smile on Belisarius’ face, not even standing next to him. Still, the general removed the smile. He reflected, a bit ruefully, that Valentinian knew him more than well enough to know Belisarius’ characteristics.
So did Aide, for that matter. Damned stupid crooked smile, came his own surly thought.
There was no moon that night. There was not even a starblaze. India’s monsoon season had begun, and the sky was heavily overcast. Except for the distant glare of the flares and cannon fire, the nearby coast was shrouded in darkness.
In that same darkness, Valentinian and Anastasius and Kujulo began lowering themselves into the river barge which had pulled alongside their vessel. The barge had been towed all the way from Charax. It was one of the Indian vessels which had been captured after the Malwa invasion of Persia was defeated the year before. Belisarius had chosen it because it would be indistinguishable from the other barges plying their trade along the Indus river.
Lowering themselves slowly and carefully—falling into the sea laden with armor and weapons was the fastest way to drown that the human race had ever discovered—the three leaders of the expedition eventually found the security of the barge’s deck. As their accompanying party of Kushan soldiers followed, Anastasius’ voice came up out of the darkness.
“Any last instructions?” the giant Thracian cataphract asked.
“No. Just be careful.”
That statement was met by the sound of muttering. Valentinian’s last words, Belisarius was quite certain, consisted of pure profanity.
Don’t blame him, said Aide. The thought was almost a mutter itself. Aide had reconciled himself to Belisarius losing his best bodyguards, but he was still not happy with the situation.
Belisarius made no reply to either voice. In truth, he was not feeling any of the usual surety which accompanied his decisions. This expedition—everything about it—was dictated by the logic of spycraft, not warcraft. That was not a realm of human endeavor in which the Roman general felt completely at ease. He was relying heavily on Irene’s advice, coupled with his own estimate of an old eunuch. A traitor, to boot.
The lines holding the barge to the warship were cast off. Belisarius could hear the barge’s oars begin to dip into the water, moving the craft toward the unseen mouth of one of the delta’s outlets.
“I hope you know what you’re doing, Narses,” he whispered.
The uneasy thought of Narses’ former treason brought a sudden whimsy to his mind. For a moment, he hesitated, gauging the noise. Then, satisfied that the roar of the distant battle would disguise any sound, he shouted a few words toward the receding barge.
“Anastasius! You’re a philosopher! What do you think of the veil of illusion?”
Anastasius’ rumbling voice came back out of the darkness. “You mean that Hindu business about ‘Maya’? Bunch of silly heathen rot. No, General—things are what they are. Sure, Plato says they’re only a shadow of their own reality, but that’s not the same—”
The rest was lost in gunroar and distance. But Belisarius’ crooked smile was back.
“This’ll work,” he said confidently.
Mutter mutter mutter, was Aide’s only comment.
* * *
“I think maybe we should—”
Eusebius fell silent. Even after his years of close association with John, Eusebius knew better than to prod the Rhodian. Right at the top of John’s multitude of character traits, admirable or otherwise, stubbornness took pride of place.