“I counted four more supply trains today,” Durias said. “All of them military, all of them escorted, all of them headed the same direction we are. None of them were ones we’ve passed before.”
“That makes eighteen, total,” Tavi said. “How sure are you about the estimates on what a Canim soldier needs for rations?”
“How sure are you about estimating what your
“Point taken,” Tavi said. “We passed two maker settlements today closely enough to get a good look at them, and I didn’t see a single male Cane among them.”
“Nor I,” Durias said. “I think your theory is sound, Captain. From all the signs, the Shuaran Canim are at war.”
Tavi liked Durias. The young Free Aleran had met Tavi-rather forcefully-in Tavi’s capacity as the Captain of the First Aleran Legion. The public revelation of his heritage, made since then, was something Durias found too uncomfortable to confront directly, and, as a result, the young man was one of the few people who still referred to Tavi in the same terms he had
“We were expecting something like it,” Tavi said quietly, looking around as he finished the last saddle.
Kitai and Crassus arrived a moment later. Crassus took up conversation with Max, whose complaints only gathered in volume and capacity-and sincerity. Max
“Anag was polite and revealed very little,” Kitai reported quietly. “But some of the other warriors nearby were less disciplined. They are excited that we are drawing near to the front. They are glad that they might be able to see action and prove themselves in battle.”
“Remind me, Durias,” Tavi said. “Isn’t it Canim practice to place hotheaded young idiots in rear-area positions precisely to avoid having attitudes like that near the actual fighting?”
“Aye, it’s common enough,” Durias said. “The theory is that they’ll grow out of it. Someday.”
“Then how do you explain Anag?” Kitai asked. “He seems sensible.”
Durias shrugged. “Maybe it took.”
Tavi shook his head. “More likely, someone assigned a young but competent subordinate to mitigate the sins of an incompetent senior officer.” He squinted into the glowering winter sky, where occasional snowflakes were already starting to come down. “I’m getting a better picture now. Tarsh had somehow attained too much rank for his level of competence. In an actual war, he was going to get a lot of otherwise-decent soldiers killed-so Warmaster Lararl stuck him in a position where his incompetence wasn’t going to get in the way of the war effort, in charge of a bunch of hotheads who needed time to season. He probably regretted losing a decent junior officer to ride herd on the lot of them, but he couldn’t leave them entirely unattended.”
“That would make sense if the post was in the middle of nowhere,” Durias countered. “But it’s still their only significant port, Captain.”
“True,” Tavi admitted. “Unless… unless Molvar has
Durias frowned. “What do you mean?”
Tavi held up his hand for silence as he followed that line of thought to several chilling conclusions.
Kitai’s head snapped around to him, her eyes narrowed and intently focused.
Tavi shook his head.
Durias frowned and looked at the two of them. “What’s wrong?”
“I hope I’m not right,” Tavi said. “But if I am… we’re in trouble.” He looked up at Kitai. “I need to talk to Varg.”
She rose and padded away without a word.
“… and not even
Crassus put a hand on his seething brother’s shoulder, and said, “Honestly, Maximus. You’re really taking this way too personally. You need to look on the bright side.”
“I’ve got blisters and muscle cramps in places not meant for the touch of anything but a beautiful woman,” Max spat back sullenly. “I’ve bitten my tongue so many times in the past three days that I whistle in musical chords when I exhale. And the smell isn’t ever going to come out of my armor, I just know it.” He narrowed his eyes and glared at Steaks and New Boots. “Where, precisely, is the bright side?”
Crassus considered that gravely. Then he offered, “If nothing else, the crowbegotten beast has given you something legitimate to complain about.”
Max’s eyebrows lifted, and his expression became that of a man who is mulling over a new thought.
Kitai returned with Varg a moment after that.
“Aleran,” Varg rumbled. “How do you like Shuar?”
“Cold and flat. And my men don’t care for taurga,” Tavi replied.