Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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Bram scratched his red beard, and looked over the southern ranks and especially the engines. Flame-throwing ballistae could make ruin of the laager. Jonan galled him, and yetâ âwellâ âhowever they might bluff about it, the fact remained that they had very little choice.
And anyway, the suggestion about payment in land sounded good. And if theseâ âGanasthiâ âhad really overrun the Ryvanian empire, then there was little chance in any case of the Killorners getting much further south.
âWell,â said Bram mildly, âwe can at least talk about itâ âat the city.â
Now the wagons, which the barbarians would not abandon in spite of Jonanâs threats, were swiftly hitched again and the long train started its creaking way over the hills. Erelong they came on one of the paved imperial roads, a broad empty way that ran straight as a spearshaft southwestward to Ryvan city. Then they made rapid progress.
In truth, thought Kery, they went through a wasted land. Broad fields were blackened with fire, corpses sprawled in the embers of farmsteads, villages were deserted and guttedâ âeverywhere folk had fled before the hordes of Ryvan. Twice they saw red glows on the southern horizon and white-lipped soldiers told Kery that those were burning cities.
As they marched west the sky lightened before them until at last a clear white glow betokened that the sun was just below the curve of the world. It was a fair land of rolling plains and low hills, fields and groves and villages, but emptyâ âempty. Now and again a few homeless peasants stared with frightened eyes at their passage, or trailed along in their wake, but otherwise there was only the wind and the rain and the hollow thudding of their feet.
Slowly Kery got the tale of Ryvan. The city had spread itself far in earlier days, conquering many others, but its rule was just. The conquered became citizens themselves and the strong armies protected all. The young queen Sathi was nearly worshipped by her folk. But then the Ganasthi came.
âAbout a year ago it was,â said one man. âThey came out of the darkness in the east, a horde of them, twice as many as we could muster. Weâve always had some trouble with Dark Landers on our eastern border, you know, miserable barbarians making forays which we beat off without too much trouble. And most of them told of pressure from some powerful nation, Ganasth, driving them from their own homes and forcing them to fall on us. But we never thought too much of it. Not before it was too late.
âWe donât know much about Ganasth. It seems to be a fairly civilized state, somewhere out there in the cold and the dark. How they ever became civilized with nothing but howling savages around them Iâll never imagine. But theyâve built up a power like Ryvanâs, only bigger. It seems to include conscripts from many Dark Land tribes whoâre only too glad to leave their miserable frozen wastes and move into our territory. Their armies are as well trained and equipped as our own, and they fight like demons. Those war-gongs, and those dead faces.â ââ âŠâ
He shuddered.
âThe prisoners weâve taken say they aim to take over all the Twilight Lands. Theyâre starting with Ryvanâ âitâs the strongest state, and once theyâve knocked us over the rest will be easy. Weâve appealed for help to other nations but theyâre all too afraid, too busy raising their own silly defenses, to do anything. So for the past year the warâs been raging up and down our empire.â He waved a hand, wearily, at the blasted landscape. âYou see what thatâs meant. Famine and plague are starting to hit us nowâ ââ
âAnd you could never stand before them?â asked Kery.
âOh, yes, we had our victories and they had theirs. But when we won a battle theyâd just retreat and sack some other area. Theyâve been living off the countryâ âour countryâ âthe devils!â The soldierâs face twisted. âMy own little sister was in Aquilaea when they took that. When I think of those white-haired fiendsâ â
âWell about a month ago, the great battle was fought. Jonan led the massed forces of Ryvan out and caught the main body of Ganasthi at Seven Rivers, in the Donam Hills. I was there. The fight lasted, oh, four sleeps maybe, and nobody gave quarter or asked it. We outnumbered them a little, but they finally won. They slaughtered us like driven cattle. Jonan was lucky to pull half his forces out of there. The rest left their bones at Seven Rivers. Since then weâve been a broken nation.
âWeâre pulling all we have left back toward Ryvan in the hope of holding it till a miracle happens. Do you have any miracles for sale, Northman?â The soldier laughed bitterly.
âWhat about this army here?â asked Kery.
âWe still make sorties, you know. This one went out from Ryvan city a few sleeps past to the relief of Tusca, which our scouts said the Ganasthi were besieging with only a small force. But an enemy army intercepted us on the way. We cut our way out and shook them, but theyâre on our tail in all likelihood. When we chanced to hear the noise of your fight with the invaders we took the opportunityâ ââ ⊠Almighty Dyuus, it was good to hack them down and see them run!â
The soldier shrugged. âBut what good did it do, really? What chance have we got? That was a good magic you had at the fight. I thought my heart was going to stop when that demon-music started. But can you pipe your way out of hell, barbarian? Can you?â
IVRyvan was a fair city, with terraced gardens and high shining towers to be seen over the white walls, and it lay among wide fields not yet ravaged by the enemy. But around it, under its walls, spilling out
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