Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure
emotion. He surveyed the scene below him. smoke was rising from somewhere in the
citadel.
“Aemilianus himself agrees to surrender his person into your hands!” called the
officer.
Aemilianus lay back on the litter, on the stone of the landing, his eyes closed.
“Terms!” called the officer. “We ask terms!”
(pg.314) The figure on the height of the wall lifted his hand, a small gesture.
“No!” cried the officer below.
He stepped back, the hand which held the white sheet lowered. “No!” he cried.
At the gesture of the commander on the wall two of the fellows flanking him,
crossbowmen, had set quarrels into their bows.
“No!” cried the officer below, backing away.
I saw the two quarrels leave the bows like metal birds. The snap of the cable
and its vibration carried even to the landing.
“Shield wall!” I cried. “All with shields here! Form the wall!”
Men with shields hurried to where I stood, lifting the shields, overlapping
them.
I forced my way among them, sometimes literally thrusting shields into position.
Quarrels struck about me. I saw in one wild instant the officer who had
addressed the wall now facing us, he having turned about. He had a look of
dismay, of disbelief, on his face. Then he fell, the two quarrels in his chest.
“Back!” I cried to the screaming women and children, “Get as close to the wall
as you can! Back! Back!”
But many fled toward us.
I saw a fellow tumble from the wall, a quarrel in his chest, though it was not
finned. It had apparently been only a sharpened rod. I saw the young fellow who
had had the this penning the people below between the water and the wall,
holding them there, like verr for the slaughter.
I crouched down behind the shield wall. “Take the commander, shielded,” I said,
“to the piers.”
“I will remain here,” said Aemilianus.
(pg.314) “You will command,” I said, “from interior lines.”
“I will stay here!” he said.
I gestured to the bearers of his litter, who lifted it, the two fellows with the
spears thrust through the net, Aemilianus stretched his hand toward me, and I
clasped it. The bearers, then, crouching down, behind four fellows holding
shields between them and the wall, hurried toward the walkway.
The women and children closest to the wall were in little immediate danger from
quarrels. It was hard to strike them with quarrels from the height of the wall.
I looked wildly to the height of the wall. The commander was no longer visible.
I then sent forth men from the shield wall, singly, and in squads, to ferry the
women and children, one at a time, or the women carrying children in their arms,
beneath the cover of their shields, to the walkway. Once they were beyond
quarrel range they hurried back to conduct still others to temporary safety.
There were cries of rage from the wall.
I saw the young crossbowman, under the cover of a shield, held by his friend,
the other young fellow from the front wall, harvesting quarrels from the
walkway. There were fine quarrels, crafted by metal workers, not sharpened rods,
not blunt sticks, fit for stunning birds. He distributed these to cohorts behind
the shield wall, neglecting not to retain some for himself. He was young but his
aim was fearsomely accurate. He had been trained on the wall, in a hundred
assaults.
I looked at the gate. It was at the end of the corridor we had followed, which
had led out, to the landing. Some men were guarding it. Naturally it opened
inward, to the advantage of the citadel. We had no adequate way, given the time
and materials at our disposal, of barring it from the outside.
Now some of the fellows on the wall were hurling stones and tiles down on the
figures huddled below.
I saw one fellow doing this suddenly pitch back, his hands clutching at the
shaft of a quarrel. Its passage upward through his head had been arrested by the
back of his helmet.
The young fellow with the crossbow set another quarrel to his weapon.
(pg.315) I sent some men forward, to try to shield the huddled noncombatants,
before they could be conducted away from the wall, but it was of little use.
Many of the noncombatants broke and ran.
Many were cut down before they could reach our shield wall.
“Stay closer to the wall!” I cried. “Get closer to the wall!”
I saw another fellow, his hands on a large stone, it held over his head, turn
and fall within the rampart, struck by a quarrel.
The young crossbowman set yet another quarrel to his weapon.
“It is harder for them then they would like,” said a fellow.
“They will be pouring through the gate in a moment!” said a fellow.
“And over the wall,” said another grimly.
He had hardly spoken when the interior gate, leading out to the landing, swung
inward, and a stream of Cosians waiting within, a moment later, helmeted, with
shields, thrusting with spears, slashing with swords, pressed out against the
defenders. At the same time a hundred ropes, along the wall, were thrown
downward and men, one after the other, began to lower themselves to the landing.
The women and children then, suddenly, screaming, panic-stricken, fled away from
the walls. The shield wall was disrupted, the frightened women and children
rushing through it, tearing at it, plunging toward the walkway behind us. As
shields were turned and lifted quarrels sped down from the walls and men
screamed, twisting, hit.
“Forward!” I cried, seizing up the shield of a fellow fallen. “To the wall!”
Behind us we heard the screams of women and children, crowding toward the
walkway. We heard, too, the sounds and screams of those swept, as by a flood,
from the landing, and from the sides of the walkway, striking into the water. In
the panic most of the women and children had fled from the wall. Whereas this
more exposed them to the fire from above it also, for us, cleared a killing
space. A fellow dropped from a rope before me, and before he could regain his
feet, he was dead. Another screamed, his (pg.316) legs hacked. Another leapt
from the rope onto the spear of a fellow near me. He was kicked from it. The
spear was then driven into another. Butchery at the foot of the wall occurred.
Some tried to descend with one hand, fighting with the other. Sometimes two men
seized an end of the rope and swung it out and back against the wall, dashing
men from it. Cosians feared then to lower themselves into the waiting blades,
like steel teeth, waiting for them. Some tried to press down, past others who,
seeing what awaited them below, clung ever more desperately to the rope. Men
fell to the foot of the wall, to be cut to pieces. Some tried to climb back up
the rope but could not do so for the others above them. Some, reaching the
crenelation again, were struck back by the jabbing spears of their own men,
screaming at them. In their fall they not unoften took others with them, the
some seventy feet or so, to the landing, the wall lower on the harbor side then
the land side.
Others clung wildly to the ropes, unable to move. Of these flighted quarrels, at
the leisure of calm marksmen, took bloody tolls. Some men below stood even on
bodies trying to reach men above them on ropes. More stones and tiles rained
down. I saw a fellow struck to one knee by a tile hitting on his shield. For a
moment he seemed in shock. Then he struggled up, again, unsteadily, to guard his
yard of wall. More quarrels were flighted over us. They hit the walkway like
hail. “Back to the wall!” I supposed that many of the bowsmen on the wall, from
the safety of the crenelation, were continuing tenaciously, following their
original orders, to seal off, as they could, the walkway, keeping the pen
closed, so to speak. A child ran screaming past me to press himself against the
wall, cowering there. In a moment he had been overtaken by a woman who crouched
down, wrapping him in her cloak. We were buffeted by women.
“Get out of the way!” cried one of our men. A Cosian slid down a rope, shielded
by the women. He thrust one aside, putting his blade into a fellow. Another,
though, from the other side, caught him, and he backed against the wall, then
turned, scratching at it, spitting blood. The child wrapped in the cloak,
soothed by the woman, watched him as he sank to the foot of the wall. The woman
was weeping. A glance (pg.317) about showed that the danger was at the gate
where the Cosians, in their hundreds, were pressing out, swelling forth, onto
the landing. I hurried along the wall, to the left of the gate, as one faces it
from the landing.
“To the gate!” I cried to every other man. “To the gate!” Their swords bloodied
they turned and sped to the vicinity of the gate. I hurried about the fighting
there and detailed men from the right, as well, to the gate. In the layered
leather of my shield bristled quarrels.
I returned to the wall. Few descended now the ropes. It could be seen from the
wall even more clearly than from the landing, I suppose, the steady, blade by
blade, stroke by stroke, expansion of Cosian territory below, its burgeoning
from the gate. When it reached the walkway the walkway would be indeed closed.
That was what I wanted most desperately to prevent. I was not interested in
holding the landing itself, except in so far as it protected the walkway. My
primary objective was to evacuate the landing and withdrew to the piers. Indeed,
I myself would wish to close the walkway once this evacuation was complete. I
seized two fellows and issued orders. I was surrendering the wall. One raced to
the wall to the left, the other to the right. Two lines were formed, one to the
left, one to the right, of fellows with shields. There two lines, converging,
the fighting in the center, by the gate, between them, led to the walkway, and
then out on the walkway, for better than forty yards.
The men in these lines crouched down, their shields between themselves and the
wall, creating an open fence of shields, a poor, broken cover, given the paucity
of their numbers, but better than none. Some fellows near the wall urged the
women and children to stream behind these, trying to reach the piers. Crouching
down many did, and, it seemed, all with children. I saw the one woman, still
clutching the child in her cloak, darting from shield to shield. Other women
chose not, either from fear or prudence, to risk this dangerous run. I saw some
looking up, in fear, at the ropes, still dangling there, and pull away their
veils, thrust back their hoods and put their hands to the collars of their
robes.
A woman clutched at me, then sank to her knees beside me, holding me. I looked
down, angrily. Her eyes, over the veil, looked up at me. It was Lady Claudia, in
the provocative (pg.318) rags that have been designed by the former Lady Publia,
that she might hope to be of interest to Cosians. A free woman, bundled in the
robes of concealment, spit on her as she passed. “Slave!” she hissed. Lady
Claudia looked up at me, clutching me. I pressed her away with my foot, to the
landing. “Traitress!” I said to her. She crawled back to me and brushed aside
her veil, to press her lips piteously to my feet. “To the piers!” I said to her.
She leaped up, sobbing, and fled toward the walkway.
Now that the wall was freed I saw more Cosians descending on ropes. I saw, too,
happily, some small boats from the piers, manned apparently by fishermen and
others, fellows who had made it to the piers earlier, making their way toward
the landing. I had little doubt that these were the results of the commands of
Aemilianus, now out on the piers somewhere, hoping that they might, in their
small way, aid in the evacuation of the landing. To be sure, for the quarrels,
it would take great courage to bring these to the landing. I could see, too, the
backs and fins of sharks crowded about the lower edge of the walkway, near the
landing. They were so thick there it seemed they constituted a surface. It was
almost as though one might walk upon them. Yet I could not have cared to tread
that shifting, treacherous, churning surface. The water, close to the landing,
by the walkway, was white with their thrashing. I think perhaps they attacked
one another as often as those in the water.
I saw more than one woman, struck from the walkway, reaching out, seizing the
walkway, pulled again, screaming to its safety, even in the midst of the frenzy
at its edge. Among the free women running to, and on, the walkway, under the
partial cover of the shields, I saw female slaves, too, barefoot and bare-armed,
in their tiny skirts, their necks in their light steel collars. The heads of the
women who were not hooded I could see were shorn and those of the slave females
cropped the shortest of all. Among those hastening on the walkway I then saw a
naked figure, stumbling, being dragged by a free woman behind her on a leash.
The naked figure’s wrists were thonged together behind her back. Her head was
covered by a hood, improvised from a part of a man’s tunic. The gag would still
be in her mouth. It was she who had been Lady Publia. I recalled that she had
not had her (pg.319) hair shorn until I had done it, with a shaving knife, in