The short Malwa lord paused, staring at the hills about him with hands placed on hips. The hips, like the lord’s belly, no longer retained the regal fat which had once adorned them. But his little hands were still as plump as ever.
“Venandakatra?” he mused softly. “Who has not marched out of his palace since Rao penned him in Bharakuccha? Whose concept of logistics is to whip his slaves when they fail to feed him appropriate viands for his delicate palate?”
Damodara brought his eyes down to the figure sprawled on the ground. Normally mild-mannered, Malwa’s finest military commander was clearly fighting to restrain his temper.
“You?” he demanded. The hands on hips tightened. “Rana Sanga!” he barked. “Do me the favor of instructing this dog again on the subject of military travel.”
“My pleasure, Lord.” Rajputana’s mightiest hand reached down, seized the Vile One’s envoy by his finery, and hauled him to his feet as easily as he might pluck a fruit.
“In order to get from one place to another,” Sanga said softly, “an army must get from one place to another. Much like”—a large finger poked the envoy’s nose—”this face gets to the dirt of the road.” And so saying, he illustrated the point with another cuff.
* * *
Sometime later, a less-assured envoy listened in silence as Lord Damodara gave him the reply to Lord Venandakatra.
“Tell the Vile—him—that I will arrive in the Deccan as soon as possible. Of which I will be the judge, not he. And tell him that the next insolent envoy he sends will be instructed with a sword, not a hand.”
* * *
After Chandasena had made his precipitous departure, Rana Sanga sighed. “Venandakatra is the emperor’s first cousin,” he pointed out. And we will be under his authority once we enter the Deccan.”
Lord Damodara did not seem notably abashed. “True, and true,” he replied. Again, he surveyed the scene around him, with hands on hips. But his stance was relaxed, now, and his eyes were no longer on the hills.
His round face broke into a cheery smile. “Authority, Rana Sanga, is a much more elusive concept than people realize. On the one hand, there is consanguinity to royal blood and official post and status. On the other—”
A stubby forefinger pointed to the mass of soldiers streaming by. “On the other, there is the reality of twenty thousand Rajputs, and ten thousand Ye-tai and kshatriyas who have been welded to them through battles, sieges and victories. And, now, some ten thousand new Bihari and Bengali recruits who are quickly learning their place.”
Sanga followed the finger. His experienced eye picked out at once what Damodara was indicating. In every other Malwa army but this one, the component forces formed separate detachments. The Ye-tai served as security battalions; the Malwa kshatriya as privileged artillery troops. Rajputs, of course, were elite cavalry. And the great mass of infantrymen enrolled in the army—peasants from one or another of the many subject nations of the Gangetic plain—formed huge but poorly-equipped and trained levies.
Not here. Damodara’s army was a Rajput army, at its core, though the Rajputs no longer formed a majority of the troops. But the Ye-tai—whose courage was admired and respected, if not their semi-barbarous character—were intermingled with the Rajputs. As were the kshatriyas, and, increasingly—and quite to their surprise—the new Bengali and Bihari recruits.
“The veil of illusion,” mused Sanga. “Philosophers speak of it.”
“So they do,” concurred Damodara. His air seemed one of detachment and serenity. “The best philosophers.”
* * *
That night, in Lord Damodara’s headquarters tent, philosophical detachment and serenity were entirely absent.
For all that he was an old man, and a eunuch, Narses was as courageous as any man alive. But now, reading again the summons from the Grand Palace, he had to fight to keep his hands from trembling.
“It arrived today?” he asked. For the second time, which was enough in itself to indicate how shaken he was.
Damodara nodded somberly. He made a vague gesture with his hand toward the entrance flap of the tent. “You would have passed by the courier on your way in. I told him to wait outside until I had spoken to you.”