The Tyrant by Eric Flint and David Drake

“Complete animals.” She gave Adrian a look which was not filled with admiration. To put it mildly. “I hope you and Father know what you’re doing,” she growled. “Me, I’d rather see these bastards destroyed root and branch.”

To Adrian’s relief, the column was leaving the remains of the village. The road—a typically good Confederate one, even here—was reentering one of the small forests which dotted the landscape of the southernmost province of the Confederacy. This province, being one of the “marches,” was relatively underpopulated. The reason for which, of course, was precisely the danger of Southron raids.

But this was a full-scale invasion, not a raid, and the villages this far from the frontier were not really alert the way the settlements near Kellinek’s Wall had been. The core of the Southron army was moving very slowly—much more slowly than Confederate infantry would have done—because of their cumbersome wagons. But a good two thirds of the barbarian force came from tribes other than the Reedbottoms, and weren’t hampered by Adrian’s “gun-wagons.” They were ranging far ahead and scattering out, following their usual customs, despite all of Adrian’s protests to Chief of Chiefs Norrys. So they fell on unsuspecting villages like a sudden nightmare; a human tidal wave from a burst dam, drowning peasants caught by surprise on a flood plain.

Not that the alertness of the soldiers guarding the Wall had done them much good. The Wall had been erected by Speaker Kellinek a century earlier, and had never been designed to stop this kind of invasion. Kellinek had simply aimed to create something strong enough to deter small raids, and act as a tripwire against large ones. The job of the Wall’s garrison was merely to slow down an invader long enough for the regional governor to bring up the mighty power of the regular brigades.

The Wall was really just a turf mound with a wooden palisade. Every few miles, a small garrison—not more than a hundred, usually—was stationed at a wooden fortress with a watchtower. The major weapon they possessed were a couple of ballista mounted on the towers.

Between Adrian’s gunners and the numbers which Norrys commanded, the barbarians had had no difficulty breaching the Wall. Adrian’s arquebusiers had slaughtered any Confederate soldier bold enough to remain in the towers or stick himself far enough above the palisade to cast a missile. And while the Southrons had no real notion of “siege warfare,” they numbered perhaps twenty thousand, in addition to the ten thousand Reedbottoms under Prelotta’s authority.

The aversion of Southron warriors to menial labor did not extend to warfare. Thousands of them had readily dismounted at Norrys’ command and built log-and-earthen ramps which enabled them to storm the palisade. Working with the most primitive possible tools, yes, nothing more than axes and crude shovels—but even working with such, thousands of men can erect a ramp in a few hours. Especially with Adrian’s gunners providing them with covering fire.

Thereafter, given the gross disparity in numbers, the Confederate soldiers manning the Wall had been butchered. Along with, needless to say, all the civilians in the settlements which had appended themselves over the past hundred years to the fortresses.

The Wall had been overwhelmed in a single day. By the next morning, thirty thousand Southrons were pouring into the southern provinces of the Confederacy.

The only survivors, except a few who managed to flee on velipads or find hiding places in the forests, had been those overrun by the Reedbottoms. Prelotta’s men treated their captives brutally, but they didn’t kill them. That was at their chief’s command. Which had been occasioned not by any “humanitarianism” on his part, but cold-blooded calculation. Prelotta wanted slaves, not useless corpses.

the first step forward in the rise of civilization, commented Center, as bizarre as it may sound. enslave people instead of slaughtering them. and do it systematically.

Adrian pondered the computer’s words. Slavery was a familiar enough practice among the Southrons. But it had what you might call a “casual” nature. Most slaves were members of another tribe captured in the course of the barbarians’ incessant internecine warfare. Treated savagely, at the time of capture—but then, usually within a generation, absorbed into the capturing tribe. The slaves were more in the nature of trophies and personal servants than a labor force subjected to systematic exploitation.

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