When he reached Belisarius, the general spoke before Venandakatra could even open his mouth.
“I am well aware that the pirates will concentrate their attack on the bow and stern, where the-where your fire-weapons cannot be brought to bear. Look to the stern, Venandakatra. There will be no breach at the bow.”
Venandakatra frowned. “There are not many of you,” he said. “I could send some-”
“No. More men would simply crowd the bow, making it more difficult for us. And I do not have time to learn how to incorporate Malwa warriors into our tactics. Whereas Romans and Axumites are old allies, long accustomed to fighting side by side.” The lie came smooth as silk.
Garmat’s face was expressionless. The sarwen grunted loud agreement, as did Anastasius and Valentinian. Eon started slightly, but a quick poke from his dawazz brought stillness. Menander looked confused, but the Indian was not looking his way, and almost immediately, Valentinian changed the young Thracian’s expression with a silent snarl.
“You are certain?” demanded Venandakatra.
Belisarius smiled graciously. “I said you would be glad to have us, soon enough.”
Venandakatra’s face grew pinched, but the Indian forebore further comment. After a moment, he scurried away and began shouting new orders. Belisarius could understand the words, and knew that the commands which Venandakatra was shrilling were utterly redundant and pointless. A disgruntled grandee making noise to assure himself of his importance, that was all.
“Verily, a foul man,” muttered Garmat. “Long ago, the Axumites had a king much like him. The sarawit assassinated the wretch and created the institution of dawazz the next day.”
“Do you really think they’re going to attack?” asked Menander suddenly. Seeing all eyes upon him, the young cataphract straightened.
“I’m not afraid!” he protested. “It’s just-it doesn’t make sense.”
“I’m afraid it does,” countered Garmat. The adviser grimaced. “I am myself half-Arab, and I know my mother’s people well. The tribes of the Hadrawmat”-he pointed to the southern shore of Arabia, now lost in the darkness-“are very poor. Fishermen, mostly, and smugglers. A great ship like this represents a fortune to them. They will gladly suffer heavy casualties in order to capture it.”
Ousanas chuckled. “Believe wise old mongrel, young Roman. Most despicable people in world, the Arabs. Full of vice and sins!”
Garmat squinted.
“O many vices! Many sins!”
Garmat looked pained.
“Lechery! Avarice! Cruelty!”
Garmat frowned.
“Treachery! Sloth! Envy!”
Garmat glowered.
“Would be great gluttons if not so poor!”
Garmat ground his teeth.
“Alas, Arabs unfamiliar with cowardice.”
Garmat smiled. Ousanas shook his head sadly.
“Is because Arabs so stupid. Cowardice mankind’s only useful vice. Naturally Arabs know nothing of it.”
“I heard a story years ago,” mused Anastasius, “that there was a cowardly Arab living somewhere in the Empty Quarter.” He spit into the sea. “I didn’t believe it, myself.”
“They’re coming,” announced Valentinian. “I can’t see them, but I can hear them.”
Belisarius glanced at Valentinian. As so often before on the verge of battle, the cataphract reminded the general of nothing so much as a weasel. The sharp features; the long, lean whipcord body; the poised stillness, like a coiled spring; and, most of all, the utter intensity of the killer’s concentration. At these moments, Valentinian’s senses were almost superhuman.
Belisarius sighed. The choice was now upon him and could no longer be postponed.
Secrecy be damned, he decided. These men-all of them-are my comrades. I cannot betray them.
The general stepped to the very prow of the ship.
“There are two ships approaching us,” he announced. He pointed, and pointed again. “There, and there. The one on the right is closer.”
He heard a slight cough behind him.
“Trust me, Garmat. I can see them almost as well as if it were daytime. They are there, just as I have described.”
He looked over his shoulder and smiled crookedly.
“The steersman you pointed out earlier is on that closer ship, Ousanas. Make good your boast.”
For once, the dawazz was not grinning. Ousanas stared into the darkness for a moment, then looked back at the general.
“You are witch,” he announced.
Belisarius made a face.
The grin made its inevitable appearance. Ousanas’ skin was so black that he was almost invisible except as a shape. Against that darkness, the grin was like a beacon of good cheer.
“Is not problem,” said the dawazz. Ousanas gestured toward the other warriors.
“These other men be civilized folk, Axumites and Romans. Hence filled with silly superstitions. Think witchcraft evil. I savage from far south, too ignorant to be confused. I know witchcraft like everything else in this world. Some good. Some bad.”
A great laugh suddenly rang out, startling in its loudness.
“Most excellent!” pronounced the dawazz. “Never had good witch before, on my side.”
“Can you truly see that well, in the night?” asked the prince shakily. “How is that possible?”
“Yes, Eon, I can. How is it possible?” Belisarius hesitated, but only for an instant. The die was cast.
“There is no time now. But after the battle, I will explain.” A glance at Garmat. “I will explain everything.” A glance at his cataphracts and the sarwen. “To all of you.”
Ousanas lounged forward, hefting his javelin.
“Where is steersman?” he asked idly. Belisarius pointed again. Ousanas squinted.
“Still too dark,” he muttered.
At that moment, Venandakatra’s voice cried out a command. A volley of rockets was fired in all directions. Several kshatriyas squealed with pain, caught by the back-blasts which flared over the hide mounds.
“Fucking idiot,” growled Anastasius. “The cowardly bastard, he’s just panicking.”
It was true enough. The volley was completely unaimed. The six rockets snaked their fiery path into nothingness. A total waste.
To all, that is, save Ousanas. For the rockets’ glare had, whatever else, bathed the sea with a sudden flare of red illumination. The pirate ships were clearly visible, and even, with difficulty, individual members of their crews.
“I see him steersman!” cried the dawazz gleefully. He hurled the javelin like a tiger pouncing on its prey. The weapon vanished into the fading red glare. Almost at once it was invisible, to all save Belisarius.
The general watched the javelin rise, and rise, and rise. He had never seen such a tremendous cast. Then, the general watched it sail downward. Downward, and truer than Euclidean dreams.
A terrible, brief cry filled the night.
Anastasius hunched his shoulders, staring grimly out to sea.
“I can’t bear to look, Valentinian. Is that damned black bastard grinning at me?”
Valentinian chuckled. “It looks like the Pharos at Alexandria. A blinding beacon in the night.”
A sudden little flight of arrows came out of the darkness. None of them came close, however. The pirates were simply reacting out of rage.
“It won’t be long now,” announced Belisarius. He smiled. “By the way, you might want to shift over to the other side, Anastasius. The ship on your side isn’t the closest, anymore. In fact, it’s wallowing in the waves. No steersman.”
Anastasius grunted his disgust. Ousanas took up another javelin.
“Maybe fucking idiot cowardly bastard Indian lord fire another useless volley,” he said cheerfully. “Then I make other pirate galley wallow in waves.”
“I’ll kill him,” muttered Anastasius.
“I doubt it,” retorted Valentinian. Suddenly, he too was grinning. “And don’t be a spiteful idiot. You’re like some petty boy in a playground. Would you rather he was chucking those spears the other way?”
Anastasius winced. “No, but-”
He got no further. A pirate ship loomed out of the darkness, like a dragon rising from the sea. A medley of war cries erupted from it. A moment later, another volley of rockets flared.