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The Dance of Time: Chapter Twelve

       Last updated: Wednesday, September 7, 2005 22:12 EDT

 


 

The Thar Desert

Near the Iron Triangle

    Three days later, at sunrise, Belisarius and a small escort rode into the Thar Desert. “The Great Indian Desert,” as it was also sometimes called.

    They didn’t go far. No farther than they’d been able to travel in the three days since they’d left the Triangle. Partly, that was because Belisarius’ bodyguards were by now pestering him almost constantly regarding his security. They hadn’t been happy at all when he’d informed them he planned to leave the Triangle on a week-long scouting expedition of his own. The bodyguards had the not-unreasonable attitude that scouting expeditions should be done by scouts, not commanders-in-chief.

    Belisarius didn’t disagree with them, as a matter of general principle. Nor was this expedition one of the periodically calculated risks he took, proving to his men that he was willing to share their dangers and hardships. It was, in fact, purely and simply a scouting expedition—and not one in which he expected to encounter any enemies.

    Why would he, after all? The Thar was enemy enough, to any human. With the exception of some small nomadic tribes, no one ventured into it willingly. There was no logical reason for the Malwa to be sending patrols into its interior. In any event, Belisarius had been careful to enter the desert much farther south than the most advanced Malwa contingents.

    Aide wasn’t any happier at the situation than the bodyguards.

    This is purely stupid. Why are you bothering, anyway? You already crossed the Thar, once before, when you were fleeing India. And don’t try to deny it! I was there, remember?

    Belisarius ignored him, for a moment. His eyes continued to range the landscape, absorbing it as best he could.

    True, he had crossed this desert once—albeit a considerable distance to the south. Still, what he could see here was not really any different from what he’d seen years earlier. The Thar desert, like most deserts, is much of a sameness.

    Yes, I remember—but my memories were those of the man who crossed this desert then. One man, alone, on a camel rather than a horse, and with plenty of water and supplies. I needed to see it again, to really bring back all the memories.

    I could have done that for you, Aide pointed out peevishly. One of the crystal’s seemingly-magical powers was an ability to bring back any of Belisarius’ memories—while Aide had been with him, at least—as vividly as if they’d just happened.

    Belisarius shook his head slightly. It’s still not the same. I need to feel the heat again, on my own skin. Gauge it, just as I gauge the dryness and the barrenness.

    He gave Abbu, riding just behind him to his left, a little jerk of the head to summon him forward.

    “What do you think?” he asked the leader of his Arab scouts.

    Abbu’s grizzle-bearded countenance glared at the desert. “It is nothing, next to the Empty Quarter!”

    Bedouin honor having been satisfied, he shrugged. “Still, it is a real desert. No oases, even, from what I’ve been told.”

    He’s right, Aide chimed in. There aren’t any. The desert isn’t as bad as it will become a millennia and a half from now, when the first real records were maintained. The Thar is a fairly recent desert. Still, as the old bandit says, it is indeed a real desert. And no artesian wells, either.

    Belisarius mused on the problem, for a minute or so.

    Could we dig our own wells, then?

    I could find the spots for you. Very likely ones, at least. The records are good, and the aquifers would not have changed much. But there are no guarantees, and... In a desert this bad, if even one of my estimates proves wrong, it could be disastrous.

    Belisarius was considerably more sanguine than Aide, on that score. He had found many times that Aide’s superhuman intellect, while it often floundered with matters involving human emotions, rarely failed when it came to a straightforward task of deduction based on a mass of empirical data.

    Still, he saw no reason to take unnecessary chances.

    “Abbu, if I send you and some of your men through this desert—a dozen or two, whatever you wish—along with a chart indicating the likely spots to dig wells, could you find them?”

    Abbu’s expression was sour. “I don’t read charts easily,” he grumbled. “Detest the newfangled things.”

    Belisarius suppressed a smile. What Abbu said was true enough—the part about detesting the things, at any rate—but the scout leader was perfectly capable of reading them well enough. Even if he weren’t, he had several young Arabs who could read and interpret maps and charts as easily as any Greek. What was really involved here was more the natural dislike of an old bedouin at the prospect of digging a number of wells in a desert.

    You’d be an idiot to trust him to do it properly, anyway. If you want good wells made—ones that you can depend on, weeks or months later—you’d do better to use Greeks.

    Teaching your grandfather to suck eggs again? I just want Abbu to find the spots. I’ll send some of my bucellarii with him to do the work. Thracians will be even better than Greeks.

    After he explained the plan to Abbu, the scout leader was mollified. “Easy, then,” he announced. “Take us three weeks.”

    “No longer?”

    Abbu squinted at the desert. “Maybe a month. The Thar is three hundred miles across, you say?”

    Not really, Aide chimed in. Not today, before the worst of the desiccation has happened. Say, two hundred miles of real desert, with a fifty-mile fringe. We’re still in the fringe here, really.

    “Figure two hundred miles of real desert, Abbu, with another fifty on either side like this terrain.”

    The old Arab ran fingers through his beard. “And you want us to use horses. Not camels?”

    Belisarius nodded.

    “Then, as I say, three, maybe four weeks. Coming back will be quick, with the wells already dug.”

    Abbu cocked his head a little, looking at Belisarius through narrowed eyes.

    “What rashness are you contemplating, general?”

    Belisarius pointed with his chin toward the east. “When the time comes—if the time comes—I may want to lead an expedition across that desert. To Ajmer.”

    “Ajmer?” The Arab chief’s eyes almost literally bulged. “You are mad! Ajmer is the main city of the Rajputs. It would take you ten thousand men—maybe fifteen—to seize the city. Then, you would be lucky to hold it against the counter-attack.”

    He stretched out his hand and flipped it, simultaneously indicating the desert with the gesture and dismissing everything else. “You cannot—can not, general, not even you—get more than a thousand men across that desert. Not even with wells dug. Not even in this fine rabi season—and we’ll soon be in the heat of garam. With camels, maybe two thousand. But with horses? A thousand at most!”

    “I wasn’t actually planning to take a thousand,” Belisarius said mildly. “I think five hundred of my bucellarii will suffice. With an additional two hundred of your scouts, as outriders.”

    “Against Rajputs?”

    Fiercely, Abbu shook his head. “Not a chance, general. Not with only five hundred of your best Thracians. Not even with splendid Arab scouts. We would not get within sight of Ajmer before we were overrun. Not all the Rajputs are in the Deccan with Damodara, you know. Many are not.”

    Belisarius nodded placidly. “A great many, according to my spies. I’m counting on that, in fact. I need at least fifteen thousand Rajputs to be in or around Ajmer when we arrive. Twenty would be better.”

    Abbu rolled his eyes. “What lunacy is this? You are expecting the Rajputs to become changed men? Lambs, where once they were lions?”

    Belisarius chuckled. “Oh, not that, certainly. I’d have no use for Rajput lambs. But... yes, Abbu. If I do this—which I may well not, since right now it’s only a possibility—then I expect the Rajputs to have changed.”

    He reined his horse around. “More than that, I will not say. This is all speculation, in any event. Let’s get back to the Triangle.”

 



 

    When they returned to the Triangle, Belisarius gave three orders.

    The first summoned Ashot from the Sukkur Gorge. He was no longer needed there, in command of the Roman forces, now that the Persians had established firm control over the area.

    “I’ll want him in charge of the bucellarii, of course,” he told Maurice, “since you’ll have to remain behind.”

    The bucellarii were Belisarius’ picked force of Thracian cataphracts, armored heavy cavalrymen. A private army, in essence, that he’d maintained for years. A large one, too, numbering by now seven thousand men. He could afford it, since the immense loot from the past years of successful campaigns—first, against the Persians; and then, in alliance with them against the Malwa—had made Belisarius the richest person in the Roman Empire except for Justinian and Theodora.

    Maurice had been the leader of those bucellarii since they were first formed, over ten years earlier. But, today, he was essentially the second-in-command of the entire Roman army in the Punjab.

    Maurice grunted. “Ashot’ll do fine. I still say it’s a crazy idea.”

    “It may never happen, anyway,” Belisarius pointed out. “It’s something of a long shot, depending on several factors over which we have no control at all.”

    Maurice scowled. “So what? ‘Long shot’ and ‘no control’ are the two phrases that best describe this war to begin with.”

    Rightly said! chimed in Aide.

    Belisarius gave the crystal the mental equivalent of a very cross-eyed look. If I recall correctly, you were the one who started the war in the first place.

    Oh, nonsense! I just pointed out the inevitable.

 


 

    The second order, which he issued immediately thereafter, summoned Agathius from Mesopotamia.

    “We don’t need him there either, any more,” he explain to Maurice.

    “No, we don’t. Although I hate to think of what chaos those damn Persians will create in our logistics without Agathius to crack the whip over them. Still...”

    The chiliarch ran fingers through his grizzled beard. “We could use him here, better. If you go haring off on this preposterous mad dash of yours, I’ll have to command the troops here. Bloody fighting, that’ll be, all across the front.”

    “Bloodier than anything you’ve ever seen,” Belisarius agreed. “Or I’ve ever seen—or anyone’s ever seen. The two greatest armies ever assembled in history hammering at each other across not more than twenty miles of front. And the Malwa will hammer, Maurice. You can be sure that Link will give that order before the monster departs. Whatever else, it will want this Roman army kept in its cage, and not able to come after it.”

    Maurice’s grunted chuckle even had a bit of real humor. Not much, of course. “But no fancy maneuvers required. Nothing that really needs the crooked brain of Belisarius. Just stout, simple-minded Maurice of Thrace, like the centurion of the Bible. Saying to one, come, and he cometh. Saying to another, go, and he goeth.”

    Belisarius smiled, but said nothing.

    Maurice grunted again, seeing the smile. “Well, I can do that, certainly. And I agree that it would help a lot to have Agathius here. He can manage everything else while I command on the front lines.”

 


 

    The third order he gave to Ashot, a few days later, as soon as he arrived.

    More in the way of a set of orders, actually. Which of them Ashot chose to follow would depend on... this and that.

    “Marvelous,” said Ashot, after Belisarius finished. The stubby Armenian cataphract exchanged a familiar look with Maurice. The one that translated more-or-less as: what sins did we commit to be given such a young lunatic for a commander?

    But he verbalized none of it. Even the exchange of looks was more in the way of a familiar habit than anything really heartfelt. It was not as if he and Maurice weren’t accustomed to the experience, by now.

    “I don’t much doubt Kungas will agree,” he said. “So I should be back within a month.”

    Belisarius cocked an eyebrow. “That soon?”

    “There are advantages to working as closely as I have with Persians, general. I know at least two dehgans in Sukkur who are familiar with the terrain I’ll have to pass through to reach Kungas. They’ll guide me, readily enough.”

    “All right. How many men do you want?”

    “Not more than thirty. We shouldn’t encounter any Malwa, the route I’ll be taking. Thirty will be enough to scare off any bandits. Any more would just slow us down.”

 


 

    Ashot and his little troop left the next morning. Thereafter, Belisarius went back to the routine of the siege.

    “I hate sieges,” he commented to Calopodius. “But I will say they don’t require much in the way of thought, once everything’s settled down.”

    “Meaning no offense, general, but if you think you hate sieges, I invite you to try writing a history about one. Grammar and rhetoric can only do so much.”

 



 


 

    Antonina stared down at the message in her hand. She was trying to remember if, at any time in her life, she’d ever felt such conflicting emotions.

    “That is the oddest expression I can ever remember seeing on your face,” Ousanas mused. “Although it does remind me, a bit, of the expression I once saw on the face of a young Greek nobleman in Alexandria.”

    Stalling for time while she tried to sort out her feelings, Antonina muttered: “When did you ever know any Greek noblemen in Alexandria?”

    Glancing up, she saw Ousanas was smiling. That serene little smile that was always a little disconcerting on his face.

    “I have led a varied life, you know. I wasn’t always shackled to this wretched little African backwater in the mountains. On that occasion—there were several—the youth fancied himself a philosopher. I showed him otherwise.”

    Lounging on a nearby chair in Antonina’s salon, Ezana grunted. He’d taken no offense, of course, at Ousanas’ wisecrack about Axum. Partly, because he was used to it; partly, because he knew from experience that the only way to deal with Ousanas’ wisecracks was to ignore them.

    “And that is what caused a peculiar expression on his face?” he asked skeptically. “I would have thought one of your devastating logical ripostes—for which the world has seen no equal since Socrates—would have simply left him aghast at his ignorance.”

    Ezana was no slouch himself, when it came to wisecracks—or turning a properly florid phrase, for that matter. Ousanas flashed a quick grin in recognition, and then shrugged.

    “Alas, no. My rebuttal went so far over his head that the callow stripling had no idea at all that I’d disemboweled him, intellectually speaking. No, the peculiar expression came not five minutes later, when a courier arrived bearing the news that the lad’s father had died in Constantinople. And that he had inherited one of the largest fortunes in the empire.”

    He pointed a finger at Antonina’s face. “That expression.”

    She didn’t know whether to laugh or scowl. In the end, she managed to do both.

    “It’s a letter from Theodora. Sent by telegraph to Alexandria, relayed to Myos Hormos, and then brought by a dispatch vessel the rest of the way.” She held it up. “My son—his wife Tahmina, too—is coming on a tour of our allies. Starting here in Axum, of course. He’ll go with us to India.”

    “Ah.” Ousanas nodded. “All is explained. Your delight at the unexpected prospect of seeing your son again, much sooner than you expected. Your chagrin at having to delay your much-anticipated reunion with your husband. The maternal instinct of a proper Egyptian woman clashing with the salacious habits of a Greek harlot.”

    He and Ezana exchanged stern glances.

    “You should wait for your son,” Ezana pronounced. “Even if you are a Greek harlot.”

    Antonina gave them the benefit of her sweetest smile. “I would remind both of you that Greek women are also the world’s best and most experienced poisoners. And you do not use food-tasters in Ethiopia.”

    “She has a point,” Ousanas averred.

    Ezana grunted again. “She should still wait for her son. Even if she is—”

    “Of course I’m going to wait for my son, you—you—fucking idiots!”

 


 

    The next day, though, it was her turn to start needling Ousanas.

    “What? If it’s that hard for you, why don’t you leave now? There’s no reason you have to wait here until Photius arrives. You can surely find some way to pass the time in Barbaricum—or Chabahari, most like—as accustomed as you are to the humdrum life in this African backwater.”

    Ousanas scowled at her. For one of the rare times since she’d met him, years earlier, the Bantu once-hunter had no easy quip to make in response.

    “Damnation, Antonina, it is difficult. It never was, before, because...”

    “Yes, I know. The mind—even yours, o great philosopher—makes different categories for different things. It’s convenient, that way, and avoids problems.”

    Ousanas ran fingers over his scalp. “Yes,” he said curtly. “Even mine. And now...”

    His eyes started to drift toward the window they were standing near. Then, he looked away.

    Antonina leaned over and glanced down into the courtyard below, one of several in the Ta’akha Maryam. Rukaiya was still there, sitting on a bench and holding her baby.

    “She is very beautiful,” Antonina said softly.

    Ousanas was still looking aside. “Beauty I could ignore, readily enough. I am no peasant boy.” For an instant, the familiar smile gleamed. “No longer, at least. I can remember a time when the mere sight of her would have paralyzed me.”

    He shrugged, uncomfortably. “Much harder to ignore the wit and the intelligence, coupled to the beauty. The damn girl is even well educated, for her age. Give her ten years...”

    Antonina eyed him. “I did choose her for a king’s wife, you know. And not just any king, but Eon. And I chose very well, I think.”

    “Yes, you did. Eon was besotted with her. I never had any trouble understanding why—but it never affected me then, either.”

    “The wedding will be tomorrow, Ousanas. Leave the next day, if you will.”

    “I can’t, Antonina. First, because it would look odd, since everyone now knows that you are waiting for Photius. People would assume it was because I was displeased with the girl, instead of... ah, the exact opposite.”

    He brought his eyes back to look at her. “The bigger problem, however, is Koutina. Which we must now discuss. Before I do anything else, I must resolve that issue. People are already jabbering about it.”

    Antonina winced. As pleased as she was, overall, with her settlement of the Axumite succession problem, it was not a perfect world and her solution had shared in that imperfection. Most of the problems she could ignore, at least personally, since they mainly involved the grievances and disgruntlements of people she thought were too full of themselves anyway.

    But Koutina...

    “I don’t know what to do about her,” she admitted sadly.

    The girl had been the most faithful and capable servant Antonina had ever had. And she’d now repaid her by separating her from Ousanas, with whom she’d developed a relationship that went considerably beyond a casual sexual liaison.

 



 

    “Neither do I,” said Ousanas. His tone was, if anything, still sadder. “She’s always known, of course, that as the aqabe tsentsen I’d eventually have to make a marriage of state. But—”

    He shrugged again. “The position of concubine was acceptable to her.”

    “It’s not possible, now. You know that.”

    “Yes. Of course.” After a moment’s hesitation, Ousanas stepped to the window and looked down.

    “She approached me about it two days ago, you know,” he murmured.

    “Rukaiya?”

    “Yes. She told me she understood my existing attachment to Koutina and would have no objection if I kept her as a concubine.” He smiled, turned away from the window, and held up a stiff finger. “’Only one, though!’ she said. ‘Koutina is different. Any others and I will have you poisoned.’ Not the concubine—you!’”

    Antonina chuckled. “That... is very much like Rukaiya.”

    Which, it was, although Antonina was skeptical that Rukaiya would actually be able to handle the situation that easily. Granted, the girl was Arab and thus no stranger to the institution of concubinage. Even her recent conversion to Christianity would not have made much difference, if any. Concubinage might be frowned upon by the church, but it was common enough practice among wealthy Christians also—including plenty of bishops.

    Still, she’d been a queen for some time now—and Eon’s queen, to boot. There had never been any hint of interest in concubines on Eon’s part. Of course, with a wife like Rukaiya, that was hardly surprising. Not only was she quite possibly the most beautiful woman in the Axumite empire, she had wit and brains and a charming personality to go with it.

    But it didn’t matter, anyway. “Ousanas—”

    “Yes, yes, I know.” He waved his hand. “Absolutely impossible, given the nature of my new position as the angabo. The situation will be tricky enough as it is, making sure that the children Rukaiya will bear me have the proper relationship with Wahsi. Throw into that delicate balance yet another batch of children with Koutina...”

    He shook his head. “It would be madness. She’s not barren, either.”

    Koutina’s one pregnancy had ended in a miscarriage. That was not particularly unusual, of course. Most likely, Koutina’s next pregnancy would produce a child.

    Suddenly, Ousanas shook his head again, but this time with rueful amusement. “Ha! It’s probably a good thing Rukaiya is so comely and enjoyable to be around. I’m afraid there’ll be no more sexual adventures on the part of the mighty Ousanas. As aqabe tsentsen, I could do most anything in that regard and only produce chuckles. As angabo, I will have to be like the Caesar’s wife you Romans brag about—even if, mind you, I can’t see where you’ve often lived up to it.”

    Antonina grinned. “Theodora does. Which, given her history, may seem ironic to some people. On the other hand, the one advantage to being an ex-whore—take it from me—is that you’re not subject to the notion some women have that the man in some other woman’s bed is much more interesting than the one in your own.” She stuck out her tongue. “Bleah.”

    “I can imagine. However...”

    “Yes, I know. We are no closer to a solution. And the problem is as bad as it could be, because Koutina is not only losing you, she’s losing me. I can’t very well keep her on as my servant when you will be accompanying me on the same trip with...”

    Her voice trailed off. Looking suddenly at Ousanas, she saw that his eyes had that slightly-unfocussed look she suspected were in her own.

    “Photius would have to agree, of course,” Ousanas mused. “Tahmina, rather.”

    Antonina tried to poke at the idea, to find any weak spots. “It still leaves the problem that Koutina will be with us. People might think—”

    “Pah!” Ousanas’ sneer, when he threw himself into it, could be as magnificent as his grin. “What ‘people’? The only ‘people’—person—who matters here is Rukaiya. And she will believe me—she’ll certainly believe you—when we explain it to her. For the rest...”

    He shrugged. “Who cares what gossip circulates, as long as Rukaiya doesn’t pay attention to it? Gossip is easy to deal with. Ignore it unless it gets too obtrusive, at which point you inform Ezana that Loudmouths Alpha, Beta and Gamma have become a nuisance. Shortly thereafter, Loudmouths Alpha, Beta and Gamma will either cease being a nuisance or will cease altogether.”

    The grin came. “Such a handy fellow to have around, even if he lacks the proper appreciation of my philosophical talents.”

    The more Antonina considered the idea, the more she liked it. “Yes. Eventually, the trip is over. So long as there are no Ousanas bastards inconveniently lounging about”—here she gave him a pointed look—“there’s no problem. Koutina goes to Constantinople as one of Tahmina’s maidservants, and...”

    Her face cleared. “She’ll do quite well. You’ve already started her education. If she continues it—she’s very pretty, and very capable—she’ll eventually wind up in a good marriage. A senatorial family is not out of the question, if she has Tahmina’s favor. Which, I have no doubt she will.”

    For a moment, she and Ousanas regarded each other with that special satisfaction that belongs to conspirators having reached a particularly pleasing conspiracy.

    Then, Ousanas frowned. “I remind you. Photius will have to agree.”

    Antonina’s expression became—she hoped, anyway—suitably outraged. “Of course, he will! He’s my son, you idiot!”

 


 

    When Photius arrived, two weeks later, he didn’t actually have an opinion, one way or the other.

    “Whatever you want, Mother,” in the resigned but dutiful tones of an eleven-year-old.

    Antonina’s older daughter-in-law, on the other hand, proved far more perceptive.

    “What a marvelous idea, Mother! And do you think she’d be willing to carry around a cuirass for me, too?” The sixteen-year-old gave her husband a very credible eyelash-batting. “I think I’d look good in a cuirass, Photius, don’t you?”

    Photius choked. “Not in bed!” he protested. “I’d break my hands, trying to give you backrubs.”


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