Several joking answers occurred to the Irishman, but he was too sleepy to voice them. “Huh?” he contented himself with saying.
“What month were you born in?”
“Uh... March.”
“Hm.” The young man pulled a chart out of his pouch and scrutinized it. “Well, you’d be better off if you were a Libra or a Cancer, but being a Pisces you needn’t fear being shot in the feet.” He grinned, bowed and walked outside.
“Do you mean it won’t happen, or I just shouldn’t fear it?” Duffy called after him, but got no reply.
Though he was sitting up as straight as he could, the sun was now lancing at his eyes from the top of the window. Not wanting to be found slouched on his back messily finishing a cup of wine just before combat, he swung his legs down off the bench and stood up and stretched, thus accidentally spilling the rest of the wine onto the dirt floor. Well, he thought, taking it philosophically, it was about time to get ready anyway. He sat down on one of the bunks and pulled on his boots, then stood and picked up his sword, hauberk, doublet and helmet, and walked outside into the shifty and heatless mid-October sunlight.
A series of warehouses in the southeast corner of the city had been hurriedly converted to barracks, and several companies of landsknechten, including Eilif’s, were quartered in them. Duffy emerged from the southernmost of them and pushed his way into the mob of mercenary soldiers assembled in a square of the Schwarzenbergstrasse. He found the table at which Eilif’s armsmaster was dispensing harquebuses, and took a long-barrelled matchlock and pouches of powder and balls.
“Duff,” the old soldier said, “I’ve got a wheellock back here I Was saving. You want to take it?”
“You take it,” Duffy told him with a grin. “Last time I tried to fire one of them I got my hair caught in the wheel. Had to retreat waving a sword and dagger, with the damned gun attached to my head.”
“I won’t call you a liar,” the man said amiably, handing Duffy several lengths of matchcord.
The Irishman carried all his stuff away to one side of the square and laid it on a curb while he put on his hauberk and leather doublet. Sporadic gunfire popped and spattered from the top of the wall, and he looked up for a moment. That’ll be the sharpshooters, he thought, warming up with some long-distance covering fire from rifled guns. He listened, but could hear no answering gunfire from outside the walls. He sat down and began the task of loading his matchlock. Vienna had been totally invested by the Turks now for twelve days.
The young man he’d seen in the barracks, whose mandrake root dangled now from his belt, ambled up and watched Duffy’s efforts critically. “Your matchcord is supposed to go through that little metal tube on top of the barrel,” he pointed out helpfully. “So the sparks from your first shot don’t light it in the middle somewhere.”
Duffy sat back and grinned up at him, squinting against the sun. “Well now, that’s the first time I ever heard that,” he said gently. “Here I thought that tube was for grating cheese with, after the battle.”
A white-bearded landsknecht who was crouched several feet away looked up from whetting his sword and barked a laugh. “If you young calves could grasp the idea of aiming,” he said, “you’d see how that match-guide can be used as a sight. Hell, Duffy’s an old soldier; he wouldn’t let his cord get near the flash-pan.”
“I’ve been known to do some beastly things, but never that,” the Irishman agreed.
Guns cracked again along the wall and the young mercenary jumped, immediately hopping through a few practice sword-thrusts to disguise the involuntary motion. An eddy in the breeze brought down to the street the curried smell of gunpowder. Straightening and stretching after his extempore exercises, he asked Duffy offhandedly, “Do you think this is it?”
“Hm? What’s what?’
“This sortie this afternoon. You think this’ll be the one that breaks the siege one way or the other?”
The older man laughed scornfully, but Duffy just smiled and shook his head. “No,” he said. “They know they can’t hold that little rise. It’s mainly a gesture. So we make another gesture: we run out there and push them back. Men will be killed, but this won’t be a decisive encounter.”
“Well, when will there be a decisive encounter?” In his efforts to keep his expression unconcerned, the lad had let some hysteria enshrill his voice. “If they back off, why don’t we just keep pushing?” he went on, in a deeper voice. “Or for matter of that, if we fall back, why don’t they?”
Duffy carefully laid his loaded gun on the pavement. “Why, because we’re old veterans, on both sides. The landsknechten know the wages of hot-headed charges—and those Turks out there are Janissaries, the best fighting men in the East. They’re not just fierce, like the akinji or the iayalars; they’re smart as well.”
“Ah.” The young man looked then across the street at the shot-scarred faces of the nearer buildings. “They’re... Christians, areni’t they?” he asked. “The Janissaries?”
“Well, they were,” Duffy said. “The Turks conscript them from Christian families inside the Ottoman Empire, but they take them before the age of seven. Then they bring them up as the most fanatical Moslems and highest-favored soldiers of the Sultan. They’ve been baptized, yes, but you couldn’t call them Christians any longer.”
The lad shuddered. “It’s like the old stories of draugs or changelings. To take our own people away, and change them, and then send them back to destroy the place they can no longer even recognize as their fatherland.”
“True,” agreed Duffy. “The men we’ll be shooting at this afternoon could well be the sons of men who fought beside the knights at Belgrade.”
“As men further west will be shooting at our tur-banned sons if we don’t turn them back,” the young man said. “But we shouldn’t have any trouble holding out, should we? I mean even if the Imperial reinforcements don’t come?”
“It’s a race,” Duffy said, “to see which gives out first: our walls or their supplies. At night you can already hear their miners digging away at the foundations underground.”
“Defeatist talk!” snapped the white-bearded mercenary, hopping nimbly to his feet and whirling his newly sharpened sword in a whistling circle over his head. “It takes a besieging force a hell of a lot longer to undermine a city’s walls than to shatter them down with big guns. You’ll notice they’ve got nothing but light cannon out there—good for arcing over the walls to break windows and knock in a few roofs, but useless for battering a way inside. Fix your mind on what a lucky thing it’s been that the heavy rains these past months forced the Turks to leave all their heavy artillery bemired on the muddy road behind them!”
He strode away, still brandishing the blade, and the somewhat cheered young man wandered off a few moments later.
Duffy remained sitting where he was, frowning and suddenly wishing he’d had more wine that morning; for the old landsknecht’s words had reminded him of the last time he’d spoken to Aurelianus, just a day or so before the Irishman had left the Zimmermann Inn to live in the barracks.
It had been a bright morning in mid-May five months earlier, and the old sorcerer had approached him in the Zimmermann dining room, smiling as he set down beside Duffy’s beer a small wooden chest that rattled as if it were full of pebbles.
“Suleiman and his entire army left Constantinople yesterday,” he said. “Let’s you and me go for a walk out by the east end of the Donau Canal.”
Duffy sipped his beer. “Very well,” he said, for it was a pleasant day and he hadn’t been out of the city in weeks, “but I don’t think we’ll be able to see them—much less hit them with your collection of sling-stones.”