10
The Spy
"Qwo, what is troubling you?" Wu asked, her voice a frustrated hiss
as she struggled with her samfu. Wu's fingers were trembling so
much that she could not thread the tog-buttons through their
holes.
Without answering the question, Qwo gently pulled Wu's hands aside
and began fastening the samfu. The gray-haired servant studiously
avoided the eyes of her mistress, a sure sign that she disapproved
of Wu's intentions.
"It distresses me when you are sullen," Wu continued, letting her
hands drop to her sides. "Please say what you are
thinking."
Qwo finished closing the samfu, then stepped back and studied Wu
with watery eyes. Though not yet sixty, the servant appeared much
older. Her gray hair was thin and coarse, and her doughy skin was
fallen and creased with age. She had the hunched back and stooped
shoulders of a woman twenty years her senior.
The two women were in Wu's sleeping hall. The samfu Wu had not been
able to fasten was her black one, the one she had been wearing when
she had surprised Batu and knocked him unconscious.
Qwo reached into the sleeve pockets of her cheo-sam, an embroidered
robe with huge sleeves and a high collar, and removed Wu's black
scarf. "What's the use?" the old woman asked. "You are the
mistress. You will do as you please, no matter what I
say."
Her tone was more that of a mother than of a servant. In a certain
sense, that was appropriate. Born into the Hsuang household only a
few years after Wu's father himself, Qwo had spent her entire life
serving the family. When Wu's mother had died, it had only been
natural for Qwo to assume a maternal role as well as that of
nursemaid.
As Qwo unfolded the black scarf, Wu said, "I have no
choice—"
"Phaw!" the old woman objected. "Sneaking about in the night,
looking for spies. This is man's business!"
"It is my business tonight," Wu replied, taking the scarf and
wrapping it around her face.
With no moon out and a low-hanging cloud cover, tonight was truly
black. Wu had been waiting for such a night for five weeks, ever
since the emperor had confined her to the house. The nobleman's
daughter intended to enter the home of Ting Mei Wan, who she
believed had betrayed Shou Lung.
Unfortunately, the emperor would never condemn Ting on the basis
that had convinced Wu the mandarin was a spy. The only real proof
the nobleman's daughter possessed was that Ting perfumed herself
with jasmine blossoms, and that the spy in the Virtuous Consort's
garden had smelted of the same flower. However, the scent of
jasmine was hardly rare inside the summer palace. Ting could
easily, and rightfully, claim that hundreds of women scented their
bodies with Jasmine.
None of those other women had expressed so much interest in Batu's
plan, however. After the audience with the emperor, the Minister of
State Security had personally accompanied Wu home. Ting had been
very friendly and curious about the whereabouts of the provincial
armies. When Wu's answers were evasive, the minister had turned the
conversation to other things. During the next four weeks, the lady
mandarin had visited almost daily under the pretext of bringing
gifts for the children. Each time, the minister had gently probed
after Batu's whereabouts. Of course, Wu had refused to answer, and
the minister had deftly changed the subject.
Wu had not been anxious to believe that Ting was a spy, for the
minister treated her and her family with such kindness that the
children had begun to refer to the mandarin as their aunt. When Ji
had let slip that Ting had asked him if he knew where his father
was, however, Wu had finally been forced to accept that her seeming
ally was a traitor.
Though Wu had been careful to hide her suspicions, Ting had not
visited in the last five days. Wu feared that the mandarin had
learned what she wanted to know from some other source. If so, Wu
was determined to stop the minister before she could pass the
information to the enemy. Being completely convinced that Ting was
a spy, Wu felt sure that the female mandarin would take advantage
of tonight's unusual darkness to meet a Tuigan messenger. Wu
intended to be at that meeting, both to safeguard the secrecy of
Batu's plan and to gather the evidence she needed to prove her
suspicions.
Qwo shuffled around behind Wu to tie the scarf. "You're disobeying
the emperor," she said reproachfully.
"I know," Wu responded. The admission sent cold shivers down her
spine.
"And of course you don't care," Qwo said, pulling the scarf
uncomfortably tight. "You've always been a disobedient
child."
"I haven't been a child for twenty years," Wu said, reaching behind
her head to loosen Qwo's knot.
"Well, you've been disobedient much more recently," the servant
said, slapping her hands against her thighs. "Why can't you just
send a message to the emperor about this spy?"
"Who would the Divine One believe," Wu asked, looking herself over
to see if she had forgotten anything, "the daughter of a country
noble or a mandarin?"
"You," Qwo said simply, giving Wu a hard look. "Even if he didn't,
you would have done your duty."
Wu frowned, though she knew Qwo would not see the expression behind
the black scarf. "This is not about duty to the empire," she said.
"It's about my father and my husband. If the enemy discovers their
plans—"
"The Divine General alone determines the outcome of war. Such
matters are not left to the hands of mortals, and no good will come
of trying to interfere. Your concern is your household and your
children," Qwo lectured. "By risking the emperor's wrath, you are
failing in your true duty."
Wu sighed and looked away from the old woman's severe gaze. About
that much, at least, Qwo was correct. So far, Wu's boldness had
brought her household nothing but embarrassment and inconvenience.
If she were caught disobeying the emperor's direct command,
however, she would not suffer the consequences alone. In such
matters, the entire family carried the burden of dishonor and
guilt.
Though Wu was prepared to face any danger for her husband, she
could not bear to watch her children pay for her crimes.
A polite cough sounded in the courtyard outside. Qwo's son, who
served as Tzu Hsuang's steward, said, "Lady Wu?"
"Come in, Xeng," Wu responded.
A paper wall panel slid aside, revealing a slim man with a hawkish
nose and a mild-manner. He was five years younger than Wu, having
been born to Qwo in the absence of a husband. Though no one had
ever admitted it, Wu suspected that Xeng was her half-brother. He
had the same nose and firm expressions that she had seen so often
in her father's face. More telling, however, was the jade medallion
Xeng wore around his neck. The dragon-shaped pendant could render a
man nearly invisible, and had been in Wu's family for hundreds of
years. Nevertheless, Tzu Hsuang had given the priceless medallion
to Xeng.
After entering the room, Xeng bowed first to his mother, then to
Wu. "The Minister of State is here with news of your father," he
said. Eyeing Wu's samfu, he added, "I'm afraid I implied you had
not yet retired for the evening."
"News of my father?" Wu repeated. "I'll see him now."
Qwo grabbed her sleeve. "Like that?"
"Yes," Wu responded, pulling the black scarf off her
chin.
"Like this."
She followed Xeng through the rest of the house, then entered the
main hall. Ju-Hai Chou sat upon one of the stone benches facing the
room's main decoration, the dolphin fountain.
As Wu entered, the minister stood and stared at her black clothing.
"I'm sorry," he said, confused. "Did I interrupt your
exercises?"
Wu decided to be frank with the minister. "No," she said. "You
interrupted my escape."
Xeng gasped, and Ju-Hai frowned. "I don't understand," the minister
said.
Wu crossed to Ju-Hai's bench and sat. "There is no need for
concern. I intended to return."
"Return!" Xeng exclaimed, taking a single step toward the bench.
"The emperor himself has forbidden you to leave. What can you be
thinking?"
Wu glared at Xeng, but he remained oblivious to the anger in her
eyes.
Ju-Hai sat next to Wu, laying his hands in his lap and locking his
fingers together. "I'm curious, too. What are you
thinking?"
Wu looked back to minister. "I'll explain in a few minutes," she
replied. "First, tell me of Father."
The minister looked away uncomfortably. Wu began to fear her father
had been killed.
"We don't have all the details," Ju-Hai began, taking Wu's hand.
"This is what we do know: six days ago, the nobles met the
barbarians outside the town of Shihfang. They lost over half their
number."
A knot formed in Wu's stomach. Batu's plan had called for
casualties, but she had not expected the toll to be so
high.
"The messenger said they were falling back to Shou Kuan," the
minister continued.
"And what of Tzu Hsuang?" Xeng inquired urgently, moving to
Ju-Hai's side.
The mandarin frowned at being addressed so directly by another
person's domestic. "Tzu Hsuang is organizing the retreat," the
minister said. "He wasn't injured, as far as we know."
Both Wu and Xeng breathed sighs of relief.
The minister turned his back on the steward and looked Wu in the
eye. "I'm afraid I must ask you to tell me where Batu went with the
provincial armies," he said. "The news of the nobles' loss has
upset the Divine One. He's beginning to voice doubts about your
husband's loyalty. It's time to reassure him."
Ju-Hai's admission did not upset Wu, for her current confinement
was evidence enough that the emperor had little faith in her
husband. Before answering the minister, however, she looked at
Xeng. "Perhaps you should inform your mother of the
news."
Xeng acknowledged the order with a bow, then turned and left the
room. He took care to close the wall behind him.
After the rice-paper panel slid into place, Wu turned back to
Ju-Hai. "Tell the emperor not to be concerned," she said. "Batu did
not expect the Twenty-Five Armies to win at Shihfang."
"That won't satisfy the Divine One," Ju-Hai responded, shaking his
head. "Kwan is taking advantage of the loss to turn the emperor
against us."
"I won't say where Batu is," Wu said stubbornly.
Ju-Hai stood and half turned away. "The time for mysteries is
past," he snapped. "You must tell me something that will reassure
the Divine One."
"If I do as you ask," Wu insisted, retaining her seat on the bench,
"the Tuigan will learn my husband's plan."
"Don't be foolish," the minister answered, scowling. "Shou Lung's
secrets are safe with the emperor."
"Are you sure?" Wu asked, meeting Ju-Hai's angry glare with a
steady gaze.
Her question caused the mandarin to pause and suppress his anger.
"What do you mean?" he asked warily.
"There's a spy in the Mandarinate," Wu answered quickly.
Ju-Hai showed no surprise at the accusation. Instead, he simply
narrowed his eyes and demanded, "Who?"
Knowing how much her revelation would hurt the minister, Wu took a
deep breath. "Minister Ting Mei Wan," she said at last.
For several moments, Ju-Hai stared at the nobleman's daughter with
an incredulous look. Finally, he asked, "What makes you think Ting
has betrayed the emperor?"
His voice was calm and curious. It was impossible to tell whether
he was more interested in the issue of Ting's betrayal or the
reason for Wu's accusation.
"Jasmine."
"Flowers?"
"Blossoms," Wu responded. "I smelled them on the spy in the Garden
of the Virtuous Consort."
"And Ting Mei Wan perfumes herself with jasmine," Ju-Hai finished,
shaking his head almost imperceptibly. "Is that the basis of your
suspicion?"
Wu shook her head. "She has been asking about Batu's
plans."
"So have I," Ju-Hai responded. "Does that make me a spy?" Before Wu
could answer, the minister raised his hand. "Don't answer. You
might lose the only friend you have left."
Wu stood and took Ju-Hai's arm. Despite the affection she felt for
the minister, it was the first time she had touched him. "Ju-Hai,"
she said, "I could never doubt you, but Ting is different. She even
asked Ji-—"
He freed his arm. "Do you have proof?"
Hurt by the rejection, Wu backed away and sat on the bench. "Not
really," she responded. "When you arrived, I was just leaving to
find some."
"Why?" Ju-Hai asked, studying her with the sharp eyes of an
interrogator. "Do you know something more?"
"No," Wu admitted, looking away. "But if Ting has something to tell
her masters, a dark night like tonight would be the time to go to a
messenger."
"Then you are proceeding on no more than suspicion?"
Wu nodded.
The minister's face became less stern. "I suppose that is all you
can do," he allowed. "Ting is a smart woman. She would not be
exposed any other way."
"So you believe me?" Wu asked, brightening.
"No," the mandarin answered bluntly. "I've known Ting Mei Wan for
many years, much longer than I've known you."
Wu turned away from the minister. If Ju-Hai would not help her, it
would be impossible to expose Ting's treachery.
A moment later, however, Ju-Hai said, "Still, I cannot dismiss such
an accusation lightly."
Wu turned to face the minister again. "Then you'll
investigate?"
Ju-Hai shook his head. "Even if you're right, Ting is far too
clever to give herself away to me."
Wu frowned, sensing that the minister was leaving something unsaid.
"So you want me to go ahead and follow her?"
"I'm not saying that" the minister replied cautiously.
"You're not saying I should leave the matter to you or the
emperor," Wu observed.
"What you suggest is very dangerous," Ju-Hai said, fixing his eyes
firmly on hers. "If you are caught outside your house, I will be
powerless to help you. The emperor may conclude that Kwan is
correct, and that both you and your husband are traitors. I assume
you have already thought about these consequences."
Wu nodded. "I would be beheaded."
"Your servants and children as well," Ju-Hai added. "Where treason
is involved, even the Son of Heaven must be ruthless."
"I realize that." As Wu spoke the words, a wave of weakness rolled
over her body.
The minister stared at her with a demanding, merciless expression.
"On the other hand, if Batu does not defeat the barbarians soon,
the emperor will still conclude that you are traitors. It is a
difficult choice. I would not wish to make it."
"What are you saying?" Wu demanded, rising.
"I am saying nothing" Ju-Hai answered. He stared at her with cold,
dispassionate eyes. Suddenly, he bowed. "I only called to relay the
news of your father. If you'll excuse me, it's late and I should be
going."
The minister turned and showed himself out of the main hall,
leaving Wu alone to puzzle over his words.
When Ju-Hai stepped out of the Batu compound, two different sets of
guards snapped to attention. One set was his personal bodyguard of
six men, which he had left outside Wu's home. The other set
belonged to Ting. Until tonight, he had assumed that they were
protecting the Batu family from Kwan's assassins. Now, he wondered
if they were more dangerous than the servants of the Minister of
War.
He paused in the gate and looked down the street. The night was
close, and the air felt heavy with moisture. Overhead, the sky was
moonless and black. Beneath the walls of the Batu compound, the
darkness was as absolute. The minister could not see even the
silhouettes of the guards that he knew would be standing there. It
seemed a fitting night for accusations of treachery and
betrayal.
Ju-Hai was not anxious to believe Wu, and he could find plenty of
reason to doubt her suspicions. Certainly, it was not unusual to
smell jasmine in the Virtuous Consort's garden. Though he had never
been inside, he did not doubt that the small park contained at
least a few of the climbing shrubs. Even if that was not the case,
Ting was far from alone in using jasmine blossoms as
perfume.
As for asking about Batu's plan, the female mandarin could hardly
be blamed for her inquisitiveness. For nearly two months now, the
general's disappearance had been the primary source of court
gossip. Even the emperor had occasionally voiced his curiosity
about what had happened to the General of the Northern Marches and
his hundred thousand pengs.
Still, Ju-Hai could not dismiss Wu's accusation out-of-hand. For
several months now, Ting had seemed more independent and
power-hungry than usual. He had taken this as a sign that she was
growing more secure in her position as a mandarin. He also saw that
it could be a result of a secret allegiance to a new
master.
Ju-Hai was deeply fond of Ting. In a world of double deceits and
elaborate subterfuges, her undisguised mercenary streak seemed
almost honest. Though he had never trusted her completely, Ju-Hai
had always felt that if he knew what she wanted, he could work with
her to achieve what he desired.
It had never occurred to the Minister of State that his protege
might want something badly enough to betray Shou Lung. Even by the
most ruthless standards of court conduct, such behavior was
unthinkable. He could not believe that Ting would resort to such
treachery.
Ju-Hai was far from confident in his opinion, however, and knew
that he could not expect to discover the truth through direct
questioning. Opening an official inquiry was also out of the
question. If it proved nothing, it would needlessly damage Ting's
reputation, making the Tigress an enemy for life.
Wu was the only tool Ju-Hai had available to discover the truth. He
did not doubt that Hsuang's daughter would do as he wanted, for he
had carefully guided the conversation to make her feel that she had
no choice except to expose the spy herself. Ju-Hai did not enjoy
such callous manipulation, but he was willing to do it for the good
of the emperor.
At the same time, the minister also felt obliged to provide what
assistance he could. His agents had been quite impressed with Wu's
kung fu, and Ju-Hai knew the general's wife would have no trouble
getting into Ting's house. However, leaving her own home, which was
tightly ringed with guards, might prove more difficult.
Ju-Hai started away from the compound, surrounded by his bodyguard.
Fifty yards later, he looked down an alley and, feigning surprise,
asked his guards, "What's happening there?"
His bodyguard peered into the alley. "Where, Minister?" asked
one.
"There—a figure. Don't you see it?" Ju-Hai pointed at the right
side of the darkened lane. "Stop in the name of the emperor!" he
yelled.
No one answered, but he had not expected a response. As far as he
knew, the alley was empty. He was simply trying to lure the guards
away from Wu's house.
When he looked back toward the Batu compound, he was pleased to
note that his plan was working. In the light of gate lamps, he saw
Ting's guards looking in his direction.
"Guards!" he called. "Come quickly—it's a spy!"
As he had hoped, the mere mention of a spy was enough to lure the
guards away from their posts. The tramp of heavy boots echoed down
the street, and a moment later twelve sentries rushed into view.
Ju-Hai's own bodyguard closed ranks around him. If there was danger
nearby, the last thing they would do was leave their master
alone.
Ju-Hai pointed down the alley. "There!" he said, speaking to Ting's
guards. "Quickly!"
The soldiers brushed past the minister with barely a second glance,
calling orders and commands to each other. Ju-Hai looked back
toward the Batu household, hoping to catch a glimpse of Wu taking
advantage of his ruse. Not even the hint of a shadow slipped out of
the gate.
Returning his attention to the alley, Ju-Hai patiently waited while
the guards rushed about, banging gates and searching doorways.
Though he wanted to leave, Ju-Hai knew that his sudden departure
would make the guards suspicious.
Ten minutes later, a drizzle began to fall. The rain was warm,
almost hot, and did nothing to relieve the stickiness of the night.
Ju-Hai did not care. It provided him with an excuse to leave the
search.
"I have no desire to stand in the rain while you let the spy
escape," he said to the sergeant. "If you are lucky enough to find
the infiltrator, take him to Minister Ting. Ask her to notify me at
once."
The sergeant bowed. "Of course, Minister."
Ju-Hai returned the bow with a cursory nod, then started down the
street with his own bodyguard in tow. Instead of going home,
however, he turned toward Ting's. His unexpected arrival at her
house would provide another distraction for Wu. He might even learn
something himself.
As he and his guards drifted through the dark streets, Ju-Hai
occasionally stopped to listen for Wu. He did not see even the
faintest suggestion of a trailing silhouette, and the only sound he
heard was the squeak of his own guards' wet armor. The only hint of
Wu's presence was a feeling of disquiet that raised the hair on the
back of the minister's neck.
When he approached Ting's house, Ju-Hai stationed his bodyguard at
the entrance of the alley that ran along the back wall of her
compound, then went down the dark lane alone. If he were to use the
front gate, by tomorrow morning, the summer palace would be filled
with gossip of their "liaison." As he had no desire to make himself
the subject of such gossip, he intended to use the back
entrance.
Just before Ju-Hai reached Ting's back gate, the wooden doors
opened. A figure dressed in a dark samfu slipped out of the archway
and paused in the light of the single gate lamp. It was Ting Mei
Wan, Minister of State Security. She carried a dark scarf and a
polished ebony tube, such as one might use to store a paper scroll.
The scabbard of a twelve-inch dagger hung from her belt.
She paused a moment to tie the scarf around her face. In that
instant, Ju-Hai knew that Wu was right. Ting, the very person
charged with ensuring the empire's security, was preparing to meet
the enemy's courier even now. There could be no other reason for
her nefarious dress. The ebony tube, the minister guessed,
contained evidence of her betrayal, probably a report of how the
emperor had taken the nobles' defeat.
Stomach knotted with sorrow and his heart pounding with rage,
Ju-Hai decided he would not allow the traitor to deliver her
message. He considered calling his bodyguard, then realized that so
near Ting's house, they were sure to be outnumbered by the
traitor's men. The Minister of State could not take the tube by
force.
Still unaware of Ju-Hai's presence, Ting glanced up at the drizzle,
then slipped the ebony tube inside her samfu. She turned away and
started down the alley.
"Did someone tell you I was coming?" Ju-Hai called, his tone
forcibly jocular.
Ting spun around, squinting into the darkness. "Who's there?" Her
face was pale with shock.
Ju-Hai did not respond. Instead, he simply took another echoing
step forward.
"Answer!" Ting commanded, drawing her dagger.
"It's just an old friend," Ju-Hai responded, stepping into the
light of her gate lamp. "Why so frightened?"
"Minister!" Ting sighed, pulling the scarf off her face. "What are
you doing here on a night like this?"
"Coming to see you. Where are you going on a night like this,
dressed like that?" he asked, pointing at her samfu.
Ting glanced at her dark clothing, then frowned at Ju-Hai. She
seemed at a loss for words and clenched her dagger hilt so tightly
that her knuckles went white. For a moment, Ju-Hai feared she would
attack him. Finally, she sheathed her weapon. "To a rendezvous,"
she said. "With whom is none of your business."
Ju-Hai tapped the tube beneath her shirt. "I'd give a thousand
silver coins to know what present you're taking him."
Ting shifted the tube out of his reach. "Is there something you
want?"
"Yes," Ju-Hai said. He did not elaborate, for he had intended to
call on Ting under the pretext of a social visit. Having caught her
as she was leaving, he needed a better excuse to detain her. He had
not yet thought of one.
"What is it? I'm late as it is."
Ju-Hai glanced down the alley, hoping that Wu was somewhere in the
dark watching the exchange. "Unless your rendezvous is with the
emperor, this is more important. We'd better go inside."
Ting's irritation disappeared instantly. "Of course, if it's as
serious as you say," she said, opening the gate.
"It is, I assure you." Ju-Hai stepped through the entrance into a
small kiosk. To the Minister of State's surprise, it was empty. "No
guard?" he asked.
"I had him sent away for a few minutes," Ting responded.
"Discretion begins at home."
She led Ju-Hai through the black, winding paths of her park. Though
he knew Ting kept a man to care for her garden, it seemed overgrown
and ominous in the darkness. All sorts of mosses and vines dangled
from tree limbs overhanging the paths, and the shrubbery was feral
and imposing in both size and shape. Ju-Hai felt as though a band
of murderous thieves might leap from the brush at any moment. It
was just the sort of place he imagined Ting would find
enjoyable.
A few moments later, they reached the main hall. Ting showed Ju-Hai
to a couch and summoned a servant to pour tea, then excused herself
to change. A few minutes later, she returned wearing a white robe
brocaded with the pattern of the mythical phoenix. Though the
loosely fastened robe reached clear to the floor, it was cut to
make the most of Ting's enticing form. It also revealed that she no
longer had the ebony tube with her.
She sat on the couch opposite Ju-Hai and crossed one sculpted leg
over the other. "So, Minister, what is more important than the
diversion I had planned?"
Ju-Hai glanced at the servant uncomfortably, as if reluctant to
speak. He was buying time. Though he had developed several excuses
for calling Ting away from her rendezvous, none seemed particularly
convincing.
The seductive mandarin dismissed the servant, then turned back to
Ju-Hai. Her expression was openly curious. "Well?"
Ju-Hai looked away and sipped his tea. "I don't know how to begin,"
he said.
Ting raised an eyebrow. "Begin at the beginning,
Minister."
Ju-Hai hesitated, asking himself if enough time had passed for Wu
to find the ebony tube. Next, he wondered whether or not the
nobleman's daughter had been in the alley and knew what to look
for. Finally, he began to worry that he had misjudged her. It would
not be unlikely that her concern for her children would prevent her
from risking the emperor's wrath, even to expose a spy.
The minister forced the last thought from his mind. It would do him
no good to doubt his plan now. His only course was to proceed as if
Wu had followed him and was even now searching Ting's house. The
more time he bought, the better would be Wu's chance of
success.
"This isn't easy for me," Ju-Hai began, setting his tea cup aside
and glancing at Ting's willowy legs.
An expression of comprehension crossed the Minister of State
Security's face. "Say no more," she said. "I understand."
"You do?"
"I think so."
Ting rose and stepped around the table. She took Ju-Hai by the
wrists and pulled him to his feet, guiding his hands inside her
robe. "Even if my rendezvous had been with the emperor," she said,
"I wouldn't have missed this."
Ju-Hai kissed her. It was a cold, dispassionate kiss, the kind to
which he imagined the seductress was accustomed.
Ting returned the kiss with a warmth and vigor that surprised the
Minister of State, then turned to lead the way into her sleeping
hall.
Two hours later, Ju-Hai was exhausted. Ting pulled him toward her
yet again, but he slipped out of the bed and said, "Enough! I'm an
old man. I must conserve my energy."
"Nonsense!" she replied, pulling him back. "Let me
rejuv—"
A wall panel slid open, interrupting Ting. The sergeant of her
guard rushed into the room. "Minister, there's been an
intruder."
The sergeant noticed Ju-Hai's naked form, then flushed with
embarrassment and bowed.
Ting leaped out of bed and grabbed her robe. "Intruder?" she
repeated, immodestly dressing right before the guard's eyes.
"Where?"
"The alley entrance," the sergeant reported.
Ting immediately started for the door. Ju-Hai quickly donned his
own clothes and followed, catching up to Ting in the garden. She
was firing questions at the sergeant, who could tell her only that
the sentry posted at the gate had been found dead.
At the kiosk, several guards holding lamps stood around their
fallen companion. As Ting and Ju-Hai approached, they backed away.
The dead sentry lay sprawled on his back, his chiang-chun at his
side. The polearm's blade was bloody.
"This is how we found him," the sergeant reported.
Ting kneeled and examined the body. When she found no wounds on the
chest or head, she angrily rolled the corpse over and examined its
back.
"There are no wounds on this body," she snapped, returning to her
feet.
"Then this is the intruder's blood," the sergeant concluded,
picking up the dead man's chiang-chun.
"Yes," Ting replied, taking the polearm and examining the red
blade. "Tomorrow, we shall find the intruder and finish the
job."
She glanced at Ju-Hai, then asked, "I wonder why he picked tonight
to come?"
"It is a moonless night," Ju-Hai answered. He focused his eyes upon
the dead guard, but was thinking of Wu. If she were wounded, she
would need help and, come morning, protection. He had to leave
Ting's house and assign a contingent of the emperor's guard to
protect the Batu household. He stepped toward the gate. "I should
return home," he said. "My presence here tonight will generate
quite a scandal."
Ting signaled her guards to block the gate. "I won't hear of it,"
she said, eyeing Ju-Hai with an emotionless, calculating gaze.
"Whoever killed this guard is still free, and for all we know he
was after you. You aren't leaving the safety of my
house."
"I really must return—"
Ting lifted her hand. "I insist," she said. Holding her jaw set
firmly, she studied her mentor with narrow, menacing eyes. "You
will go nowhere until I find the intruder."
11
Yenching
On the Shengti River, as in the summer palace, the night was humid
and black. Despite the warm drizzle, the General of the Northern
Marches remained on deck with his ship's first mate. The wiry
riverman hung over the gunwale with a lamp in his hand, watching
the dark waters for any hint of trouble. The man's shirtless torso
glistened with what might have been rainwater, but was more likely
a nervous sweat. Periodically, he called out an instruction that
another boatman promptly relayed to the helmsman.
The hull bumped something pulpy, and Batu inhaled sharply. "What is
it?"
When the mate did not answer promptly, Batu feared they had hit a
sandbar. The summer flood season had ended two weeks ago, and the
river had since returned to normal, exposing hazards that had not
previously troubled the general's fleet. Already tonight, a dozen
ships had run aground. Batu was beginning to regret his decision to
continue up-river in darkness.
"What did we hit?" Batu repeated, laying a hand on the mate's bare
back.
The man did not look up. "I don't know, General, but there's no
cause for worry. If it was anything dangerous, it would have slowed
us down."
The mate's reassurance did little to make Batu breathe easier. The
moonless night was stifling and ominous, silencing even the owls
that lived along the riverbanks. Only the sloshing of the fleet's
oars disturbed the quiet.
Behind his own junk, Batu could see another dozen bow lights
twinkling in the drizzle. An additional four hundred and seventy
boats followed the twelve he could see, but the weather was so
close that it obscured the rest of the fleet completely. Had the
other ships not been behind him at dusk, the general would have
found it difficult to believe that they were there now.
Two more pulpy thumps sounded at the ship's waterline. Swearing at
the river dragon, the mate pulled himself back onto deck. His eyes
were opened wide, and his face was as pale as ivory.
Another soft bump sounded against the hull.
"What?" Batu demanded. "Is something wrong?"
The mate pointed at the river. "Spirits. They're blocking the
way."
Batu took the man's lamp and peered over the gunwale. The smell of
rancid meat assaulted his nose. He retched and nearly dropped the
lamp. A bloated white form with stiff arms and puffy legs drifted
into view. It bumped the hull and slipped away into the darkness as
suddenly as it had appeared. Though he had glimpsed the figure for
only a moment, the general had seen and smelled too much death to
mistake it for anything but a decaying corpse.
Another half-dressed cadaver came into view, bringing with it the
renewed stench of rotten flesh. Batu steeled himself against the
awful odor and examined this body more closely. It had once been a
woman, but the flesh was so gruesome and pallid that he could not
say of what age or appearance. She lay tethered in a bed of dark
weeds.
The vegetation alarmed Batu more than the dead woman. Pulling the
mate back to the gunwale, he said, "Weeds! It's getting
shallow."
The wiry man peered over the side, but remained unconcerned. "The
plants are nothing, General," he said. "This close to Yenching, the
river is slow and broad. There are many weed beds, but they won't
stop our junks."
The boat pushed past the woman's corpse, but another came into view
immediately. The mate tapped the gunwale like a drum, a gesture
that supposedly attracted the attention of the thunder god Lei
Kung, whose duty it was to escort reluctant spirits to the Law
Courts of the Dead. "It's the river spirits we must worry about,"
the riverman said.
"Those aren't spirits," Batu replied, waving a hand at the river.
"They're nothing but corpses."
The shirtless man looked doubtful. "Where'd they come from?" he
demanded.
"Do you have relatives in Yenching?" Batu asked.
The mate raised an eyebrow. "My father's brother lives there with
all his children."
"Then you don't want me to answer your question, especially if we
are as close to the city as you believe."
The man fell silent, considering the meaning of the general's
words. Finally, he frowned and firmly clasped Batu's shoulder. "If
I say we are near Yenching, General, we are near Yenching. I just
pray you remember these bodies when you catch the
barbarians."
Batu did not object to the mate's familiarity. Like the rest of the
boatmen crewing the fleet, the man was a merchant sailor and lacked
military discipline. Fortunately, the mate and his fellows made up
in expertise for what they lacked in discipline. Counting the
twelve junks that had run aground that night, the fleet had lost
only seventeen ships and a handful of men.
Considering the circumstances and the pace of the last six weeks,
Batu was more than pleased with his hired boatmen. For much of the
journey up the Shengti, they had struggled against the heavy runoff
waters from the distant mountains. To make matters worse, in order
to hide the fleet from onlookers and spies, the wu jens from the
High Ministry of Magic had kept it buried in a cloak of bad
weather. Even with these precautions, the ships had often dropped
anchor while the cavalry masqueraded as Tuigan scouts and drove
riverside villagers from their homes.
Despite the hardships and delays, the rivermen had maintained a
steady pace. Working in shifts and aided by Batu's soldiers, they
had kept their boats moving twenty-four hours a day. Thanks to
their skill and tireless effort, the general was arriving at
Yenching nearly a week ahead of schedule. When he returned to the
summer palace, Batu decided, he would recommend to the Divine One
that he consider recruiting commercial boatmen as officers in the
imperial navy.
The merchant rivermen were far more superstitious than their
military counterparts. The first mate still had not returned to his
post. Instead, he was casting frightened glances over the side and
tracing mystic symbols in the air.
"The bodies in the river are just corpses," Batu repeated. "They're
not going to hurt you. On the other hand, if we hit a sandbar or
rock ..." The general touched his sword hilt
meaningfully.
The gesture reminded the riverman of his duty. "Forgive me," he
said, resuming his position as guide. Batu stood nearby, eyeing the
weed bed with as much suspicion as the mate eyed the
corpses.
As the boat continued forward, the bodies came into view with
increasing frequency. After several minutes more, it seemed the
river was choked with corpses. The smell of rotten flesh grew
stronger. Even Batu, who considered himself to have a strong
stomach, found each breath a sickening experience. Several pengs
came topside under the mistaken impression that the air would be
fresher. Soon, the junk was buzzing with subdued discussions of the
terrible smell and speculations as to why so many bodies were in
the river.
Though he did not tell any of his men, Batu knew the reason for the
awful scene. His great grandfather had told him tales of Tuigan
atrocities on unimaginable scales. Assuming those stories had been
even partially true, the general had no doubt that the corpses
belonged to the citizens of Yenching. In the face of the enemy's
advance, the inhabitants had no doubt retreated into their city,
thinking they would be safe inside its walls. After Yenching fell,
the Tuigan had probably punished the inhabitants with
extermination, dumping the bodies into the Shengti.
Thirty minutes later, the general noticed a lamp shining through
the drizzle ahead. The holder stood on the shore, swinging the
light in a circle. Batu ordered the fleet to drop anchor. The
circling light was a signal from his cavalry scouts indicating they
had something to report. If, as the mate insisted, the fleet was
within a few miles of Yenching, the message would be
important.
Batu dispatched a sampan to fetch the officer of the scouts, then
sent for his subcommanders. Next, he went below and awakened Pe,
who it seemed could sleep through a battle. When the adjutant was
dressed, the pair returned to the deck.
The provincial generals and the scouting officer were already
waiting. Wasting no time with pleasantries, Batu looked directly to
the cavalry officer. "What do you have to report?"
After a nervous glance at Batu's subordinates, the officer began.
"Commanding General, Yenching is only five miles away. As you
expected, it has been taken by the enemy." The young man paused and
grimaced, clearly quite reluctant to continue.
"And?" Batu prodded.
"The enemy is still there," the scouting officer said.
"How many?" demanded Kei Bot Li, the stocky general from
Hungtze.
"The entire army," the scout replied.
Batu frowned, thinking of his conversation with Tzu Hsuang just
four days ago. His father-in-law had been expecting a major
confrontation, and had not reported since. Batu could only guess at
the reason. Hsuang might have been killed, the noble armies wiped
out, or the mirror abandoned during retreat. Whatever the cause of
the silence, however, Batu felt sure of one thing: the nobles had
met a large force of Tuigan.
Addressing the scout, Batu said, "What you report is
impossible."
The cavalryman inclined his head. "If that is what you say,
General."
"Don't be so ready to change your report, young man," Kei Bot
interrupted, stepping closer to the officer. "What makes you think
the barbarians are still in Yenching?"
The officer glanced at Batu nervously, clearly afraid to contradict
the commanding general of the greatest Shou army ever assembled.
Batu nodded to the young man.
After receiving permission to speak, the officer said. "Horses.
There are one hundred and fifty thousand or more outside the
city."
"How certain are you of the numbers?" Batu asked, his mind reeling
at the thought of so many horses.
The young cavalryman looked at the deck. "We can't be sure," he
admitted. "We didn't dare approach their camps until dusk, and
there were too many beasts to count in the short time we had.
Still, I'm confident we haven't exaggerated. The beasts cover the
plain like a blanket."
"What of the barbarians themselves?" asked Kei Bot.
"Yenching is well lit," the officer reported, glancing toward Kei
Bot but addressing Batu. "It appears the enemy is taking shelter in
the city."
"They're not sleeping with their horses?" Batu asked,
frowning.
"No more than three hundred campfires burn outside the city," the
scout said confidently. "Perhaps many of the barbarians are
sleeping without fires, but then who is lighting the
city?"
Pe pointed to the body-choked river. "Certainly not the
citizens."
"This makes no sense," Batu said, leaning on the gunwale. "Why
would there be so many barbarians in Yenching?"
"Evidently, the residents tried to hold Yenching," Kei Bot offered,
nodding at the corpses. "Perhaps they didn't burn their grain
before the city fell."
"The Tuigan must have taken the city weeks ago," objected one of
the other generals. "Why would they remain here, consuming what
must be a very limited supply of food? It would be wiser to eat
their fill, then carry what they could and press
forward."
"Our enemies are barbarians," Kei Bot snapped, turning on the man
who had contradicted him. "After two months of starvation, they
must now be content to feast and rest."
Batu stepped between Kei Bot and the other general. "Our enemies
may be barbarians," he said, "but they are cunning and disciplined.
Whatever their reason for remaining in Yenching, General Kei, it is
not lethargy."
Batu deliberately delivered the comment with a scornful tone. Kei
Bot received the censure with a bow and an apologetic expression,
but Batu knew from experience that the reproach would have little
permanent effect.
"The Tuigan must be ready for us," Pe said, addressing his
commander. "Perhaps a spy learned of your plan, General."
All six commanders grimaced.
"That's impossible," Batu responded, shaking his head. "Only one
person at the summer palace knows where we are, and she would never
reveal the plan."
"The summer palace is far away," Kei Bot responded, looking toward
the southeast. "Who can tell what is passing there."
Kei Bot's ominous comment sent an unaccustomed pang of concern
through Batu's breast. He cast a disturbed glance toward the
distant palace, wondering what his family was doing and if they
were safe. The concern was a new emotion, for the general had
always felt confident of his wife's ability to care for the family
when he was gone. During their last two weeks together, however, Wu
had seemed anything but assured or strong. Diplomacy had never been
one of her gifts, and it had been clear that she felt insecure in
the political atmosphere of the summer palace.
"Is something wrong, General?" Pe asked, daring to touch his
master's sleeve.
Batu shook his head, forcing his family from his mind. This was no
time to let such thoughts interfere with his duty. If familial
concerns keep a soldier from focusing on the task at hand, Batu
reminded himself sternly, he had no business having a wife and
children. In war, there was too much at risk to let personal
affairs take priority over military matters.
The general turned back to the cavalry officer. "What do you make
of the horses and the lights in the city?" he asked.
The officer's eyes widened in shock. "Me, General?"
"Yes," Batu snapped. "You're the only one who has seen the enemy
camp. Do they appear prepared for battle?"
The young cavalryman looked from one general to another, as if
begging for mercy.
"Answer!" insisted Wak'an, the officer's direct
commander.
The scout licked his lips nervously. Finally, he answered, "In
truth, they aren't prepared for battle. They have established a
wide perimeter of guardposts, of course. But the rain has made the
ground muddy. Their patrols move slowly and do not range far. They
have displayed a surprising lack of concern about the
river—"
"They don't realize it's a means of transport," Kei Bot observed, a
condescending smirk on his face. "The barbarians are not
boatmen."
"No doubt," Batu agreed. He turned back to the cavalry officer.
"Continue."
"There's little more to report. By moving only at night, our scouts
have engaged but one patrol, and we destroyed it to a man. We
haven't made any blunders, and the enemy's lazy deployment suggests
they don't suspect our presence. They look as though battle is the
farthest thing from their minds."
"They sound more like a garrison than a battle-ready force," Pe
observed, furrowing his brow.
"Perhaps you're right," Batu said. "They might be only a
garrison."
"With a hundred and fifty thousand horses?" objected another
general.
Batu nodded. "Yes. Even if the Tuigan don't know our plan, their
spies have certainly reported the disappearance of our five armies.
As he has demonstrated so far, the barbarian commander is no fool.
The only bridge across the upper Shengti is at Yenching. Yamun
Khahan knows as well as we do that if he loses that city, he will
be cut off from his homeland and trapped in Shou Lung."
"So he would garrison the city," Kei Bot observed. A moment later,
he frowned. "But not with a hundred and fifty thousand men. From
your estimates of the enemy's strength, General Batu, that's three
quarters of the barbarian army!"
The other generals muttered in agreement, but Batu shook his head
thoughtfully. "The Tuigan are as rich in horses as Shou Lung is in
people," the general said. "Each man leads an extra mount,
sometimes two. There are probably no more than seventy-five
thousand warriors in Yenching."
"Even so, seventy-five thousand men is no garrison," countered Kei
Bot, meeting Batu's gaze with a critical expression. "Until we know
why there are so many barbarians in Yenching, we must proceed with
the utmost caution."
Batu suffered a sinking feeling. "As much as it pains me to admit
it, your counsel is wise," he replied. The General of the Northern
Marches looked over the gunwale toward the city. "What can they be
doing with so many men in Yenching?" he demanded, his voice
betraying more frustration than he cared to reveal to his
subordinates.
After a long and anxious silence, it was the cavalry officer who
dared to speak. "If I may, General, I can offer one possible
answer." He inclined his head to show that he did not mean to be
presumptuous.
"If you know the reason for the barbarian behavior, it is your
obligation to report it!" Batu snapped, irritated that the man's
timidity had kept him from fully discharging his duty.
"Speak!"
The officer paled at his commander's tone, then quickly wet his
lips and began. "I have only a few thousand horses in my command,"
he said, staring at Batu's feet. "Still, we have found it difficult
to feed them, especially in the areas the peasants have burned.
With a hundred times as many horses, the problem must be a hundred
times as severe."
Batu nodded. "Go on."
The cavalryman dared to look up. "If I were the enemy commander,
I'd leave my extra horses and as much of my force as prudent at
Yenching—especially if the granaries were full when the city
fell."
"You're right," Batu declared, laying a commending hand on the
scout's shoulder. "They aren't foot soldiers, so the Tuigan ignore
the possibility of using the river for transport. We aren't
cavalrymen, so we forget the difficulties of feeding the horses and
don't recognize the obvious problems our enemy faces."
The other generals voiced their agreement with the cavalry
officer's analysis. Presently, however, Kei Bot scowled. "What
difference does this enlightenment make, General Batu? Your plan is
spoiled. Even if we had the proper equipment, it would take weeks
to siege Yenching. Before it falls, the rest of the barbarians
would return to aid the garrison."
Batu meet the stocky general's scowl with narrowed eyes. "Then we
must take the city by surprise," he said. "Tonight."
His subordinates gasped. The cavalry officer nearly choked with
shock. "B-But that's impossible!"
"Nothing is impossible," Batu replied, a smile of anticipation
creeping across his lips. The general loved nothing more than
testing himself and his men in battle, and storming the city might
well prove a challenge worthy of their talents.
Still, Batu harbored no hope that Yenching would be a truly
magnificent combat. The circumstances were not right for the epic
confrontation he coveted. There was nothing illustrious about
taking an enemy by surprise, especially when the opponent was
outnumbered and far away from the supervision of a brilliant
commander.
There was no chance, Batu realized, that Yenching would be the
illustrious battle of which he dreamed. On the other hand, there
was no chance that it would prove boring, either.
After standing for several moments in dumbfounded silence, the
scout bowed deeply. "Please forgive me, General," the young officer
said. "I didn't explain the situation clearly. The barbarians will
see us coming. There is a guardpost two miles outside the city.
They will see your boat lamps as soon as you round the next bend.
That's why I stopped you here."
"The enemy is not as poorly prepared as you had hoped," Kei Bot
said, a satisfied smirk creasing his lips. "There is no way to
surprise the Tuigan. You have no choice but to siege the
city."
"I repeat" Batu said flatly. "We'll take Yenching tonight. I have
just the way to do it."
Ignoring his subordinates' open mouths, Batu turned to the cavalry
officer. "Can you stampede the barbarian's mounts?"
A grin crossed the scout's lips. For the first time that night, he
looked certain of himself. "It will be a simple matter. The animals
may be tethered, but no rein in the world will hold a frightened
horse—much less a hundred and fifty thousand of them."
"Good," Batu replied, giving his subordinates a confident smile.
"Yenching will be ours by morning."
He outlined his plan, assigning each general the responsibility for
coordinating one particular aspect. When he finished, he ordered
the fleet commander to begin debarking the army on the river's
northern shore.
Batu took a few minutes to help the feng-li lang and his assistants
from the Rites Section kill a hunting falcon. The feng-li lang
claimed the sacrifice would persuade the spirits to grant favorable
weather for the coming battle. After the bird's body had been
ritually burned in a bronze caldron, Batu turned his attention to
the most crucial part of his plan. He had a hundred and fifty
volunteers, armed with swords and torches, hidden deep within the
bilges of two cargo junks. Next, he had the boats loaded with
grain, taking care to make sure that his pengs could not be
discovered easily.
Batu ordered the two junks to light all their lamps and sail
upriver, then returned to his cabin to write his customary letter
to Wu. No sooner had he set out the ink and writing brushes,
however, than Pe came below.
"The pengs are debarked and formed into units," the adjutant said,
standing in the tiny cabin's door. "The Most Magnificent Army of
Shou Lung is ready to march."
"Good," Batu responded, dipping his brush into the ink well. "We'll
begin as soon as I finish writing to Wu."
Pe looked concerned. "More than half the night has passed, General,
and we have a long march ahead."
"I am aware of the hour and the distance to Yenching," Batu
snapped, irritated by Pe's presumption. He felt sure the adjutant
had meant to imply he was wrong to delay the army while attending
to a personal matter.
The adjutant blanched. "Forgive me, General."
"Don't apologize," Batu replied, realizing that Pe was correct to
criticize him. Every minute he delayed increased the likelihood of
the sun rising on his army before it reached Yenching. If that
happened, even the Ministry of Magic's wu jens could not keep such
a vast number of men concealed.
Batu laid his writing brush aside and stood, fastening his chia.
"Issue strict orders that no peng is to speak. Every man is to
secure all loose equipment. We don't want enemy sentries hearing
even the faintest voice or the most distant piece of clanging
metal."
Pe did not turn to leave. Instead, still looking at the floor, the
adjutant said, "But your letter, General. I didn't mean you should
not finish it, only that it might be wise to send the army
ahead."
Batu cast a regretful eye at the blank paper. "I must be with the
army at all times, in case the enemy discovers us," he said.
"Anyway, I can't send the letter to Wu. If the Tuigan captured the
messenger, they would certainly learn our position. The risk is too
great to take just to keep a personal promise."
He motioned Pe out of the doorway. The adjutant led the way up to
the deck and into a waiting sampan. After the general and his aide
reached shore, Pe issued the orders concerning talking and clanging
equipment.
A few minutes later, the army began marching through the mud, the
cavalry leading the way. Within half an hour, the drizzle stopped
and a brisk wind blew out of the west.
Batu had no idea whether the change in weather was the spirits'
doing or not, but he whispered a silent thanks to them anyway. The
breeze would carry any sounds his army made away from the
enemy.
At regular intervals, the scouts sent guides back to lead the
infantry over the next section of ground. The guides took the army
through a labyrinth of shallow valleys. Because of the absolute
darkness, men were constantly stumbling and falling on the broken,
muddy ground. For the largest part, they avoided cursing or calling
out, but it was impossible to prevent loud thuds and
clangs.
Twice, the army paused while the cavalry surrounded and attacked an
enemy outpost. During these times, Batu could hardly restrain
himself from riding forward to direct the small engagements
personally. If one of the enemy sentries escaped, the Shou armies
would lose the element of surprise. Fortunately, the cavalry proved
up to the task and most of the Tuigan died with their weapons
sheathed.
Three hours later, the armies were still struggling through the mud
and the cavalry scouts had not yet called a halt. It was nearly
morning, and the first gray streaks of false dawn were appearing in
the eastern sky. Batu feared the barbarians would be awake by the
time his army arrived at Yenching.
Just when he felt sure the scouts had lost the way, the cavalry
commander returned. Pointing at a hulking silhouette that loomed
ahead, the young man said, "Yenching is over that hill,
General."
"Let us see what there is to see," Batu replied.
The general and the scout dismounted and crept to the hilltop, Pe
following close behind. The three men were careful to stay low to
the ground, lest they cast a silhouette against the false
dawn.
Yenching lay in the shallow valley of a tributary to the Shengti.
The streets were barely discernible from the buildings at this
early hour. A dark band, which Batu took to be a wall, surrounded
the city. Outside the wall, thousands of dark shapes that could
only be horses milled through the valley. The cavalry officer had
not exaggerated their huge number.
A canal had been dredged from the Shengti River to Yenching,
entering the city through a fan-shaped gate designed to accommodate
boat traffic. Batu could see little else, for the night remained
dark and moonless.
Pe pointed at the Shengti. "There are the junks,
General."
Two sets of lights were slowly moving up the river. As the three
men watched, it became apparent that the barbarian sentries had
also noticed the junks. The trio caught several glimpses of mounted
silhouettes skulking along the shore behind the boats.
Within a few minutes, the junks reached the mouth of the canal and
turned toward the city. To Batu's relief, the enemy did not stop
the boats. It appeared the Tuigan were every bit as desperate for
supplies as the cavalry officer had suggested. Assuming the craft
to be ladened with cargo, the barbarians were not making any moves
that might frighten the crews and send the junks back down the
river. The horsewarriors would probably not seize the boats until
they were inside the city, where fleeing would be impossible.
Shortly afterward, torches in hand, the pengs hiding in the bilges
would rush from the junks. They would set fire to everything they
could, burning Yenching from the inside and forcing the barbarians
to flee into the arms of the Shou armies waiting outside.
The boats' progress up the canal seemed painfully slow. False dawn
faded, then reappeared a few minutes later as first light. Batu
could barely stop himself from giving the order to stampede the
horses. He was anxious to start the battle, and not just because he
was looking forward to it.
The general from Chukei was relying upon at least partial darkness
to keep the barbarians confused. Every minute closer to dawn
reduced his chance of victory. At the same time, if he attacked too
early, the enemy would smell a trap and close the river gate. The
junks would remain outside Yenching, forcing a siege.
Finally, the boats reached the gate. Batu turned to the cavalry
officer. "Prepare your men."
A broad grin spread across the young commander's face. "Yes, my
General."
As the cavalryman turned to go, Batu spoke to Pe. "Order the
generals to advance behind the cavalry. Position one thousand
archers along the canal to prevent the enemy from swimming out of
our trap. Return here after you are finished."
"Yes, General," Pe replied, creeping down the hillside to relay the
orders to the messengers.
A few minutes later, the river gate closed behind the two junks.
Behind Batu, the cavalry assembled just below the crest of the
hill. The Shou riders numbered less than three thousand, but Batu
thought they would suffice for what he wanted today.
A sliver of orange sun appeared on the horizon, casting reddish
light on the eastern side of the hill. Fortunately, the western
side remained plunged in shadows. Thanking the night spirits for
this small favor, Batu stood and waved the cavalry forward.
Immediately, the line advanced. As they passed the general, the
mounts broke into a trot, then into a charge as they descended upon
the valley.
The infantry followed a moment later, rushing forward at a
disciplined double time. They paid less attention to formation than
to speed, for their goal was to surround the city as quickly as
possible. Nevertheless, the officers did their best to keep the men
grouped into assigned units in order to avoid confusion during the
battle.
On the western side of the hill, the light was still dim. Batu
could not see how the enemy sentries were responding to the charge.
Nevertheless, he heard guttural shouts of alarm being raised all
around the valley.
Pe returned to the general's side and stared down the hill. "What
now, my commander?"
"We wait," Batu said, keeping his eyes fixed on Yenching.
The adjutant nodded. "The battle is in the hands of the
spirits."
Batu raised an eye to the sky. Without taking any credit away from
the spirits, who seemed to be on his side so far, the general had
to disagree with his adjutant about who governed the outcome of the
battle. "You are mistaken, Pe. Like us, the spirits have done their
part." The general waved a hand at the valley. "The battle is now
in the hands of something less predictable than spirits. It is in
the hands of our pengs."
As the general finished his observation, the cavalry began to shout
and whistle. A muffled thunder built deep within the valley as the
first Tuigan horses fled the Shou charge. A few hundred barbarians
carrying torches rushed from the city.
Though the enemy was responding earlier than he expected, Batu was
not concerned. The more barbarians who left the city, the better.
Any horsewarriors trapped outside of Yenching would be unavailable
to defend the city against the second part of his plan.
As the Shou cavalry rode deeper into the valley, terrified whinnies
filled the air. Within moments, the ground began to tremble. The
great barbarian herd was stampeding.
The sun cast a few long rays into the valley, and Batu could see
more Tuigan pouring from the city. As often as not, the flood of
frightened horses swept away the confused barbarians. At the same
time, the first Shou armies reached crossbow range. They fired at
enemy soldiers and horses indiscriminately, doing more damage by
further panicking the herd than by directly inflicting
injuries.
"Your plan is working, General," Pe observed.
Batu did not answer, for he was far from convinced that the battle
was won. Clearly, the horsewarriors would be deprived of their
mounts. A few thousand of the barbarians had already died
attempting to leave the city. As of yet, however, the general saw
no sign that the most important part of his plan was working.
Chasing the horses away and surrounding the city would be of little
use if the enemy remained holed up inside.
As the sun lit Yenching more brightly, the Shou cavalry drove the
last of the enemy's horses away, easily overwhelming the few
confused sentries on the far side of the valley. The five
provincial armies moved into position around the city, training
their weapons on its gates. As Batu had ordered, one thousand
archers took up positions along the banks of the canal.
"Not even a rat will escape," Pe said, studying the
deployment.
"I don't care about the rats, but I would be glad for a few
escaping Tuigan," Batu replied, his heart sinking. "The most
important part of our plan seems to have failed. Yenching is not
burning."
Though it no longer mattered, Batu wondered what had gone wrong
inside the city. The volunteers could have been discovered before
the cavalry charge distracted the barbarians. Or perhaps Batu had
been wrong to think that a handful of men could burn an entire
city.
"The battle is not over yet, General," Pe said, pointing at a
column of smoke rising from the center of the city.
"It is," Batu snapped, shaking his head in disgust. He was not
upset at his adjutant, but at his own failure. "The enemy knows
we're here. One small fire will not chase the Tuigan out of
Yenching. They'll just put it out."
Pe furrowed his brow. Though he was looking at the same scene as
his commander, he clearly did not see the same thing. "How can they
fight fires and us at the same time?" he asked.
"What do you mean?" No sooner had he finished the question than the
general understood exactly what his adjutant meant. Batu had never
intended to storm the city, but the barbarians didn't know that.
With a little prodding, the Shou commander could keep the Tuigan at
the city walls, leaving the volunteers inside Yenching free to burn
the city.
"Send the order quickly," the general said.
"What order?" Pe asked, uncomfortable with the vagaries of what
amounted to mind-reading.
"To prepare for storming the city, of course," Batu answered. "A
brilliant plan, Pe!"
"Thank you, General," Pe replied proudly.
"However, your plan needs one minor adjustment," Batu added,
frowning in concentration as he studied the city. "We've got to
convince the Tuigan our attack is real. Order General Kei Bot to
storm the gates on his side of the city."
"He could be wiped out," Pe objected.
The general hesitated, remembering how Kwan Chan Sen had selected
the Army of Chukei as a decoy. There was little difference between
what Batu intended to do and what Kwan had done. Still, Batu could
see no other way to hold the enemy's attention while the city
burned.
"Issue the order," Batu said firmly. "Inform Kei Bot of the true
nature of his mission. Tell him that I selected his army because I
know his pengs will perform their duty honorably. We will withdraw
the survivors as soon as possible."
A pained expression flashed across Pe's face as he, too, recalled
the destruction of the Army of Chukei. Nevertheless, he simply
bowed and turned to obey.
Kei Bot did not protest the order. Within minutes of receiving the
message, his twenty thousand pengs charged Yenching's eastern gate.
The other armies supported his attack by moving forward and lobbing
tens of thousands of arrows into the city, both fire-tipped and
normal.
As Batu had expected, the enemy held fast. There were simply too
many Tuigan, and they were too good with their weapons to let the
Shou breach the wall. Kei Bot's men fell by the thousands, a
constant rain of barbarian shafts pouring down on them. The ground
near the city wall took on a red tinge, though Batu could not tell
whether the color was a result of the morning sun or the fallen
pengs' blood.
Still, the feint was working. Although only Kei Bot's men were
attacking a gate, the aggressive posture of the other four armies
kept the barbarians at the city walls. Inside Yenching, the plumes
of smoke grew more numerous and much heavier.
Unfortunately, the barbarians remained at their posts for the next
thirty minutes. Kei Bot's losses mounted steadily, but the pudgy
general continued to press the attack fiercely. The smoke from
Yenching poured over the walls, covering the Army of Hungtze in a
thick blanket of haze.
Finally, the archers that Batu had assigned to guard the canal
running out of Yenching began to fire into the water. The young
general instantly realized that the barbarians had reached their
breaking point. They were attempting to escape the burning city by
swimming under the river gate.
"Recall Kei Bot!" Batu ordered, pointing at the archers. "Warn the
other generals to expect the enemy to sally."
Pe bowed and left to relay the commands. Aside from the instruction
for Kei Bot to withdraw, the orders were unnecessary and tardy.
Before the messengers could reach the valley floor, Yenching burst
open like an agitated anthill. Heedless of the Shou armies awaiting
them outside, the barbarians rushed from every gate in Yenching,
madly firing their bows.
The Shou armies greeted the Tuigan with wall after wall of arrows.
The men did not pause even an instant to give the barbarians a
chance to surrender. The sight of Yenching's citizens choking the
Shengti river with their bloated bodies was too fresh in the
soldiers' minds.
For many minutes, the Tuigan poured out of the burning city in a
steady flow. From seventy yards away, the Shou ranks met the
barbarians with an equally steady stream of arrows. Soon, the
bodies of horsewarriors lay piled in front of the gates in
fan-shaped heaps. Still the barbarians came, scrambling over their
dead and wounded fellows without regard. Billows of smoke rolled
over the city, and great tongues of flame shot out of every opening
in the wall.
Finally, the bell towers collapsed and disappeared into the city's
ruins. The Tuigan rush dwindled away to nothing. The air reeked of
burned flesh, and Batu knew that thousands of Tuigan had not
escaped the fires inside Yenching. The largest part of the army,
however, lay outside the walls, one or more bamboo shafts
protruding from their bodies. The loud, steady hum of thousands of
groaning men filled the valley.
The Shou ranks stared at the heaps of Tuigan bodies in dazed
silence. After a few moments, a single soldier drew his chien. The
man walked to a wounded horsewarrior, then quickly and efficiently
beheaded the moaning barbarian with his sword. As if by command,
the rest of the pengs drew their swords and followed the man's
lead.
It did not cross Batu's mind to stop the slaughter.
12
The Ebony Tube
One thousand miles east of Yenching, Batu's wife lay half-awake,
oblivious to the great victory her husband had already won that
morning. It was well past dawn, and golden sunlight filled the
sleeping hall. By now, Wu realized, Ji and Yo would be anxiously
awaiting her presence at breakfast.
The general's wife tried to sit up, and her stomach filled with
fire. Wu cried out, then collapsed back onto her pillows. She
placed a hand over her stomach. A wet bandage swathed her
midsection.
Qwo appeared out of a corner and dabbed a wet cloth on Wu's
forehead. "Be still, mistress."
Wu withdrew her hand and stared at the blood on her palm. "What's
this?" She was still struggling against her sleepy
confusion.
"You know better than I," Qwo replied pointedly. She wiped the
blood off her mistress's hand. "You came home in this state last
night."
As Qwo turned away to rinse the cloth, the events of the previous
night returned to Wu: following Ju-Hai to Ting Mei Wan's house, the
hurried search that yielded only the ebony tube Ting had been
carrying when the Minister of State arrived, meeting the unexpected
guard on the way out of the house. The sentry had taken Wu by
surprise, stepping out of a kiosk that had been empty when she had
passed it earlier.
If the guard had challenged her before attacking, he might still be
alive. When she had felt the blade of his chiang-chun burning
across her abdomen, however, Wu had reacted instantly. She had
lashed at the bone in front of the man's ear with an eagle-beak
finger strike. The sentry was dead before he dropped his
weapon.
Doing her best to staunch the bleeding, Wu had rushed home without
regard to silence or stealth. She had not dared to examine the
laceration's severity. As soon as the stinging blade had slid
across her abdomen, Wu had known that she was badly hurt.
Inspecting the wound would have increased her chance of fainting
before reaching help.
At her house, only the gate guards had returned from searching for
Ju-Hai's mysterious spy. Even wounded and dizzy from the loss of
blood, Wu had scaled the wall and slipped into her home in silence.
The last thing she remembered was stepping into the courtyard,
feeling her knees buckle, and calling for Qwo.
Qwo finished rinsing the cloth and turned back to her
patient.
"The tube," Wu asked. "What was inside?"
Qwo sighed. "I didn't look. Spying is not a woman's
business."
Gritting her teeth against the pain, Wu pulled herself into a
half-seated position. "Bring it here."
Qwo fetched the tube from the night cabinet. When Wu moved to
accept it, her hand was sticky with blood. "You'd better read it to
me," she ordered.
Scowling with disapproval, the old servant opened the end cap and
removed a piece of paper. She unrolled it and squinted at the
writing. Speaking slowly, she read.
" 'Mighty One: Your humble servant begs forgiveness for her lengthy
silence. The guards captured your messenger of three fortnights ago
as he fled the summer palace. Though he died rather than reveal my
identity, security within the grounds has been tightened.
Illustrious Emperor of All Peoples, not even I can pass freely,
though I have tried several times to reach your agents in the
city.'"
Qwo paused to look at Wu. "Who is this 'Illustrious Emperor of All
Peoples?'"
"The enemy commander," Wu said anxiously. "Read"
Qwo turned her eyes back to the paper." 'I have much to report. The
emperor has relieved General Kwan of responsibility for the war
against your indestructible armies, and surprised the Mandarinate
by placing a young general from Chukei, Batu Min Ho, in command of
the war. Batu is highly regarded by the wisest men of this court,
who are but candles next to your brilliance. It is whispered that
Tuigan blood runs thick in his veins. If he is as cunning as they
say, perhaps this is the reason.' "
The old servant paused, unable to suppress a smile at the
flattering reference to her mistress's husband.
"Go on," Wu urged.
Qwo scowled at Wu's impatience, but did as instructed. " 'The
emperor has given Batu one hundred and fifty thousand soldiers.
These troops consist of five provincial armies numbering twenty
thousand apiece. The balance comes from twenty-five small noble
armies. You have already engaged and defeated the noble armies
under the leadership of Tzu Hsuang Yu Po—' "
At the mention of Hsuang's defeat, a catch developed in Qwo's
throat. She paused to clear it, then continued reading a moment
later. " '—and news of the outcome was received quite sorrowfully
by the court.
" 'I can tell you nothing of General Batu's armies. He has
disappeared with his entire force, and no one knows how. I will
attempt to discover where they have gone. In the meantime, I have
taken advantage of his disappearance to start several rumors
suggesting General Batu has deserted and joined the mighty forces
of your irresistible horde.' "
"I'll choke her with her own eyes!" Wu spat. The fervor of her
words sent a wave of pain through her abdomen. She could not stifle
a groan.
"Not soon, you won't," Qwo observed.
"Keep reading," Wu instructed. "I must know what else this traitor
has done to my family."
Qwo returned her eyes to the document. " 'I have only one other
item to report, Dispenser of Ultimate Justice. Emperor Kai Chin had
nothing to do with the attempt on your life, and even now does not
know of Shou Lung's involvement. Two of my fellow mandarins,
Ministers Kwan Chan Sen and Ju-Hai Chou, were the ones who sent the
hu-hsien assassin against you. After your ultimate victory, it will
give me great pleasure as your Shou regent to dispense the final
punishment to these murderous dogs. Until we meet, I remain your
dedicated and faithful servant.'"
Qwo looked over the top of the paper. "Can this be true?" she
asked. "Did it take only two men to start this war?"
"Perhaps," Wu said, astonished by this last revelation. "It doesn't
matter. The war can't be stopped now, perhaps not even by one
hundred thousand men. We must take this message to the
emperor."
Rolling the scroll, Qwo said, "I'll fetch Xeng and have him take
this to Minister Ju-Hai—"
"No!" Wu snapped, her abdomen once again filling with fire. "It
must go directly to the emperor."
"But Xeng will never get an audience," Qwo protested.
"He must," Wu countered. She was simultaneously afraid to charge
Xeng with such an important mission and resigned to the fact that
she had no other choice. Clearly, she could not deliver the message
herself.
"We can't trust Ju-Hai," Wu continued. "This letter accuses him of
some terrible acts. He might not wish it to reach the hands of the
Divine One."
The old servant frowned. "But your father trusts him."
"My father didn't know of the minister's involvement in starting
this war," Wu said, "and my father didn't see him sharing a spy's
bed."
"That can't be possible," Qwo objected. She raised the hand holding
Ting's message as if warding off an evil spirit. "Your father's
alliance with Ju-Hai goes back ten years. There must be an
explanation for what you saw."
"Perhaps," Wu replied, "but I'm not willing to take that chance.
Summon your son, then get a brush and paper. An explanatory letter
might gain him a faster audience."
Qwo left the hall, then returned a few moments later with a brush
and paper.
Wu dictated a message to the emperor. In it, she apologized for
disobeying his command, then explained what she had discovered. As
she signed the letter, she hoped the Divine One would not be
offended by the blood that smeared off her hand onto the
paper.
Xeng arrived just as his mother sealed both Wu's letter and Ting's
message into the ebony tube. Wu quickly explained what she wanted,
telling him twice to ask the emperor to send a contingent of his
troops to replace Ting's.
After Wu finished, Qwo handed the ebony tube to Xeng, then kissed
him on the brow. "Take care, my son," she said. "If Ting's troops
see you leave, I doubt you'll reach the emperor alive."
Xeng placed a hand over the jade pendant hanging beneath his robes.
"There is no need to worry, Mother," he said. As he spoke, his body
and clothes changed colors to match the hues of the chamber walls.
"I won't fail Lady Wu."
By the time Xeng finished speaking, Wu could no longer see him.
Qwo's son was not so much invisible, she knew, as perfectly
camouflaged. As her father's steward slid aside a wall panel and
left, the one weakness of his magic medallion became apparent. When
he moved, Wu saw a watery, man-shaped blur against the backdrop of
the wall.
After Xeng left, Qwo peeled Wu's cover back to reveal a thick swath
of crimson bandages. "You need a doctor," she said, her tone almost
chastising.
Wu nodded. "After Xeng returns with help, but no earlier. Ting may
not know who stole her message. Until the emperor arrests her, it's
too dangerous to reveal my injury. A doctor could lead her right to
us."
"We must hope Xeng reaches the emperor soon," the old maidservant
said. She unfastened the bandage and changed the dressing. As Qwo
finished, two sets of small feet sounded in the stone courtyard
outside.
"The children!" Wu gasped, pushing her maidservant away. "Don't let
them see me like this!"
Qwo threw the cover over Wu, then stepped to intercept Ji and
Yo.
She could not move quickly enough. A wall panel slid aside, then Ji
burst into the room, his sister in tow. "Mother!" he cried,
pointing a slender finger toward the front of the house. "The
emperor's wife is coming!"
Wu and Qwo looked at each other, confused and alarmed. "The Shining
Empress?" Wu asked. "Are you certain?"
Ji nodded. "She has a whole bunch of soldiers!"
"How do you know it's the empress and not a consort, child?" asked
Qwo, fixing her eyes on the boy.
"Because I saw her before," Ji responded, scowling at being
doubted. "In the emperor's house—"
"You've never been in the Forbidden Halls," Wu objected.
"Yes we have!" Yo interrupted, stamping a foot. "You remember. I
went to sleep!"
"We weren't in the Forbidden Halls," Wu explained. "We were in the
Hall of—" She stopped in midsentence, realizing Ji and Yo were
mistaken about more than the building they had been in. Aside from
Wu, the only woman in the Hall of Supreme Harmony that night had
been Ting Mei Wan.
"Qwo," she gasped, "they're talking about Ting!"
The old woman's face blanched. "What are we going to do?"
Wu threw her covers aside and tried to rise, but the effort hurt
too much. Fleeing was out of the question. It would be a marvel if
she made it out of the room.
"Meet them at the gate and then stall," Wu instructed her
servant.
"Stall," Qwo repeated, half dazed. "I'll try." She scurried toward
the front of the house.
Wu turned to Ji and Yo. They were both staring at her bandage with
big, frightened eyes. A lump formed in Wu's chest and she almost
began to cry. She was more frightened than she had ever been, but
only for her children.
"Come here, little ones," Wu said, holding out her arms.
They obeyed, their eyes still fixed on their mother's wound. Tears
came to both their eyes, and they began to sob.
"Shhh," Wu urged, embracing them closely. She could barely restrain
her own tears. "Mother has been hurt, but you must be brave. Some
bad people are coming."
"What should we do?" asked Ji, choking back his sobs and wiping his
eyes.
Wu wished that she had an answer. She might be able to move long
enough to help Ji and Yo climb over the exterior wall. Even if they
escaped, though, the little ones would be lost and alone in the
immensity of the summer palace. Her only choice was to hide her
children and hope Xeng returned with help soon.
Releasing her son and daughter, Wu said, "Do you know a good place
to hide?"
"Under the floor!" Yo said, pointing a stubby finger toward the
center of the room. "When I hid there, Ji couldn't find
me."
"You were cheating!" Ji objected, furrowing his smooth
brow.
"That doesn't matter now," Wu said, laying a gentle hand on her
son's shoulder. "These people will search for you much harder than
you look when you play games. Are you sure this is a good place to
hide?"
They glanced at each other uncertainly. Finally, Ji said, "It's
very dark and small."
"Good. You must go there quickly. Don't come out until Xeng, Qwo,
or I tell you it's safe."
Wu kissed each of her children, then sent them away.
They had barely left the hall before Qwo's voice echoed across the
courtyard. "I insist, Minister Ting. Lady Wu is ill. She is not
receiving visitors."
"All the more reason I must see her," Ting replied tersely. "Now
stand aside."
"I refuse," Qwo replied.
"Guards!" Ting roared.
The sound of a short scuffle followed, then twenty boots clattered
across the stone courtyard. Wu adjusted her cover so that it
concealed her bloody bandage, then prepared to receive
Ting.
She did not wait long. Within moments, a soldier grabbed a wall
panel and thrust it roughly aside. Two green-armored guards stepped
into the sleeping room, their weapons held at the ready. Ting came
next, followed by an angry Qwo.
"What is the meaning of this?" Wu demanded, scowling at the
mandarin. "Can't you see that I'm ill?"
"Please forgive this intrusion," Ting said curtly, obviously
unconcerned with whether Wu forgave it or not. The minister turned
to a guard. "Uncover her."
The soldier frowned at being asked to invade a noblewoman's
privacy. Nevertheless, he did as ordered.
Ting pointed at the freshly changed bandage, which was already
spotted with new blood. "So you were the one," she said. "How
disappointing."
"What do mean?" Wu demanded.
"Last night, a spy broke into my house and stole an important state
document," Ting said, stepping toward the bed. "This spy killed a
guard on the way out, but not before being wounded. As we can see,
you are wounded."
"This?" Wu asked, indicating her bandage. "Qwo and I were cutting
some silk. Her knife slipped."
"Not likely," Ting replied. "Save me the trouble of searching your
house. Return the document and no harm will come to you or your
family."
Even if the ebony tube had been in her possession, Wu would not
have returned it. She had already seen that Ting was an
accomplished liar, and the minister could not afford to spare the
life of anyone who knew the truth about her.
In response to Ting's demand, Wu simply shrugged her shoulders.
"What document?" she asked.
She had decided to feign innocence, but not because she hoped to
fool Ting. If Ting's guards were not part of the mandarin's plot,
and Wu suspected that they were not, Ting would have to go through
the pretense of firmly establishing Wu's guilt before causing the
noblewoman any harm. That would take time, and the longer Wu could
stall, the better the chance that Xeng would return with
help.
Xeng was not having much success, however. He stood at the gateway
to the Square of Heavenly Delight, in the center of which rose the
Hall of Supreme Harmony. His medallion remained activated and he
was still perfectly camouflaged. Unfortunately, the pendant's magic
only worked for a certain amount of time and it would soon fade. He
would not be able to reactivate it for at least a day.
The emperor's guards stood shoulder-to-shoulder around the Hall of
Supreme Harmony, their weapons drawn. The great square surrounding
the tower was filled with the green-armored guards of the Ministry
of State Security. Xeng did not doubt that Ting had arranged the
tight security measures, probably by claiming to have discovered a
plot against the Divine One's life. Still, considering the evidence
he carried in the ebony tube, Xeng thought he would attain an
audience—providing he could reach the chamberlain.
To do that, however, the steward had to slip past Ting's guards.
Xeng had no doubt their orders were to detain or kill anyone
attempting to see the Son of Heaven. Still, he had to try, for Wu's
life clearly depended upon his success.
There had been a time when the steward would not have cared about
Wu's safety. At the age of fifteen, a friend had remarked on his
uncanny resemblance to Tzu Hsuang, and Xeng had finally realized
why the lord took so much interest in his well-being. Instead of
being thankful for Hsuang's attention and love, though, Xeng had
grown resentful and bitter because his true lineage would never be
acknowledged. Nevertheless, Wu had treated him with nothing but
respect and kindness, tolerating his snide remarks with an
easy-going grace that only infuriated him further.
Xeng had remained hostile for nearly five years, until his own
mother finally grew so tired of his attitude that she asked him to
leave the Hsuang castle. It had been Wu, the object of so much of
his enmity, who had interceded on his behalf and asked Qwo to
reconsider. Though Wu had not said as much, it had been clear that
she realized their relationship and did not want to see harm come
to her half-brother. After that, Xeng's attitude had reversed
itself. Wu had subtly acknowledged his lineage and hereditary
rights even more than his own mother. As a result, he was not about
to allow any harm to come to his half-sister now.
Xeng stepped forward, moving slowly to take maximum advantage of
his magic camouflage. Though he often used his dragon medallion to
spy upon his father's enemies, the steward had never before
attempted to sneak past so many armed men.
In the next minute, he advanced thirty steps and came to the fringe
of Ting's troops. They stood at attention in small units of ten,
each formation turned to face a different section of the park and
separated by ten feet. Xeng selected the two groups closest to him.
He slipped forward ever so slowly, carefully watching his footing
so he did not trip or disturb a loose stone. Though his heart beat
like a hammer and his panicked lungs craved air, he forced himself
to breathe in small, even breaths.
Nevertheless, on several occasions a sentry squinted or shook his
head as Xeng moved. Each time, the steward froze and did not move
again until the guard looked away.
Finally, disaster struck. Two guards noticed him
simultaneously.
As the one on the left rubbed his eyes, the one on the right asked,
"Did you see something?"
"A blur," the other responded.
Xeng knew he was in trouble. He turned and, heedless of how easy it
would be to see him, rushed toward the gate. The two guards shouted
an alarm, then ran after his hazy form.
Well-practiced in escaping pursuit while camouflaged, Xeng did not
panic. He suddenly stopped and dropped to his belly. A moment
later, he slowly crawled a short distance back toward the Hall of
Supreme Harmony and did not move. The soldiers began yelling in
confusion, issuing contradictory reports of his
whereabouts.
Xeng remained on his stomach for several moments, considering his
next move. Ting's troops clearly wanted to capture him, for over a
hundred of them ran about the square, wildly swinging their
polearms at the air. As the steward studied his pursuers, it became
clear that they were more concerned with preventing him from
reaching the Hall of Supreme Harmony than with catching him. The
largest number moved to form a wall between him and his objective.
Behind Ting's guards, the emperor's troops watched the square with
interest, but did not budge from their assigned posts.
Two units began moving toward the gate, trying to cut off Xeng's
escape route. Realizing he had no chance of reaching the emperor
alive, the steward reluctantly decided to flee.
Xeng stood and ran along the wall, away from the gate. When the
troops noticed him, he dropped to his belly again, then slowly
crawled toward the gate. He had failed in his mission, he thought,
but all was not lost. He still had the ebony tube, and Wu would be
able to develop another plan for delivering it to the Divine
One.
But Wu was in desperate need of the emperor's help at that very
moment. She lay crumpled on the floor, where Ting's troops had
dumped her when they began searching for the stolen document. Qwo
sat beside her mistress, and Wu's head now rested in the old
servant's lap.
In the space of a few minutes, Wu's house had been reduced to a
shambles. Even with a hundred men searching the compound, the
troops from the Ministry of State Security had found nothing, not
even Ji and Yo. Ting Mei Wan angrily paced back and forth, forcing
her personal escort of twenty soldiers to stand crowded together at
the edge of the chamber.
"Where is it?" Ting demanded for perhaps the hundredth
time.
"I have no idea what you want," Wu gasped, also for perhaps the
hundredth time.
"Liar!" Ting responded. "My patience is at an end." She turned to
two guards, then pointed at Qwo. "Take her."
Wu forced herself to sit up. "No!"
Two guards seized Qwo by the arms and dragged her to Ting's
side.
"She knows nothing!" Wu said.
Ting studied Wu with narrowed eyes. "Tell me who does," she
countered.
Qwo spat in the minister's face. "Tell this traitor
nothing!"
A soldier quickly took a cloth off Wu's night cabinet, then gave it
to Ting. Staring at the old maidservant, the mandarin slowly wiped
the spittle off her brow. In a calm voice, she said, "Kill this
woman."
The guards blanched, but one dutifully drew a ten-inch pi shou. The
dagger glinted ominously in the morning sunlight.
"Wait!" Wu yelled. She was barely able to force the words from her
throat. Qwo's entreaty and the guards' reluctance had given her one
last idea.
Addressing the soldiers, Wu said, "We're not the traitors; Ting
is." Her voice quivered with stress and fatigue. "The document
she's looking for is evidence of her treachery."
A veteran with a missing ear frowned and looked to Ting. The
mandarin appeared momentarily stunned and confused, but she
recovered quickly. "If what you say is true," the minister said,
"produce the document."
"Don't!" Qwo urged, feebly trying to pull free of her captors. "My
life is worth nothing."
Ting and the soldiers turned to Wu expectantly. The noblewoman
considered revealing where Xeng had gone. If the treacherous
minister realized she was defeated, perhaps she would see no use in
harming an old woman. Unfortunately, Ting did not seem like the
type of woman who gave up easily.
Wu shook her head.
"Kill the servant," Ting ordered. As she spoke, she did not take
her eyes off Wu.
The guard holding the pi shou obeyed without hesitation. Qwo let
out a terrible, woeful scream, then quivered as the last traces of
life fled her body. The guard twisted the dagger and plunged it
farther in to finish the job. Finally, he withdrew the pi shou and
allowed the old woman's body to slump to the floor.
Ting turned back to Wu. "Now, will you—"
She was interrupted by sobbing children. "Where is that coming
from?" the minister demanded of nobody in particular.
A guard kneeled and put his ear to the floor. "From beneath the
house."
Ting pointed at the floor. "Get them!" she ordered. "Perhaps
they'll persuade this traitor to confess."
Several guards rushed outside, and several more used their weapons
to begin prying up floorboards.
"They're just children!" Wu pleaded. "Leave them alone!"
"Nothing would please me more," Ting replied. "I have no wish to
injure a child. Their fate, however, is in your hands."
Wu crawled into a kneeling position, ignoring the agony in her
midsection. "I won't allow you to hurt Ji or Yo," she
warned.
"Then tell me where you've hidden my paper!" Ting
shouted.
They stared at each for several moments, Wu breathing slowly and
evenly, gathering her remaining energy to defend her children.
Several guards moved into defensive positions to either side of
Ting.
Wu knew now that the minister intended to kill her whether or not
she gave up the document. She could accept her fate because she had
no other choice. The noblewoman was not ready to sacrifice her
children's lives, however, not even for the sake of the empire.
Fortunately, she could think of two ways to save them. Only one
involved giving Ting what she wanted.
After prying up the fifth plank, a guard said, "Here they
are."
He reached below the floor and extracted Yo. She was curled into a
stout little ball, covered with dirt and sobbing loudly. The
soldier passed her to the veteran with the missing ear, then
reached into the opening a second time. He screamed and cursed
loudly.
"He bit me!" the guard snapped, holding his hand.
"What do you expect?" asked the veteran. He set Yo aside, then
stuck his head and shoulders below the floor. "Come here, little
tiger!"
Yo took advantage of the opportunity to scurry over to her mother.
Without looking away from Ting, Wu guided her daughter to her side.
She continued to breathe evenly and steadily, focusing her mind on
what she intended to do.
The guard emerged with Ji a moment later. Tears and dirt streaked
the boy's face, but his expression remained determined and angry.
He reached out and raked at his captor's face with his fingers, but
his arms were too short to reach.
Ting looked away from Wu, settling her gaze on Ji. "Which shall it
be?" she asked. "Your son—or the document?"
"Neither, traitor!" Wu yelled, releasing the store of energy she
had been building.
The noblewoman's wound reopened as she sprang forward, but she felt
no pain. Her thoughts, her spirit, and her body were focused only
on one thing: reaching Ting.
Wu moved so quickly that she took all but three guards by surprise.
The first stepped in front of her, his polearm held across his body
like a staff. Wu stiffened her index and middle fingers into the
secret sword position, then drove them into the man's throat. His
larynx popped, and he collapsed, dropping his weapon and gasping
for breath.
The next guard swung his chiang-chun at Wu's knees. She leaped into
the air, catching the soldier simultaneously with a camel kick to
the groin and a ram's fist to the nose. As he finished the swing,
he collapsed into a twisting mass of groaning flesh.
Wu was not so lucky with the third guard. When she descended from
her jump, he stepped forward and jabbed, using his weapon like a
lance. Wu tried to knock the blade aside with a crane's wing block,
but the guard was a strong man and held the shaft in place. The
blade slipped between the noblewoman's ribs and punctured her
lung.
Having seen the fate of his two fellows, the guard took no chances
with Wu. The blade felt icy and painful in the noblewoman's lung,
and the strength to continue fighting escaped with her final
scream. The guard's thrust carried her a full two feet. She landed
on her back with the polearm protruding from her chest. The guard
still held the other end.
Ting had not moved. The minister stared at her attacker with a look
of uncomprehending shock, hardly registering that she had come
within a breath of dying.
Wu lay on the floor for what seemed to her like an eternity of
silence, struggling to breathe through the cold agony in her lungs.
The only thing she could see, the only thing she was aware of, was
the guard at the other end of the polearm. He was a young man, no
older than Batu had been when she had first met him. The youthful
soldier looked deathly afraid.
Ji and Yo screamed and rushed toward their mother's side. The
earless veteran caught and restrained them before they
arrived.
Recovering from her shock, Ting stepped to Wu's feet and pushed the
frightened young guard aside. The anger had drained from her face.
It had been replaced by something between incredulity and sadness.
"Why?" she asked. "Why such a foolish attack?"
"For. .. children," Wu gasped. Each word made her lungs ache as
though she were breathing ice instead of air. An agonized
half-scream escaped her lips.
Ting looked at the veteran holding the children. "They don't need
to see this! Get them away from here!" She waved her arms at the
other guards. "Get away from here, all of you!"
The veteran obediently took the children and left the hall. The
rest of the guards retreated to the edge of the room.
Ting returned her attention to Wu. "Where is the ebony tube?" she
asked, kneeling at the wounded woman's side. "It doesn't matter
now. Tell me."
Wu shook her head. "Children are safe."
"What do you mean? Why are they safe?" the mandarin asked as she
leaned close.
"No good to kill—if I'm dead," Wu said.
"Is that what you think?" Ting sighed, her voice breaking with
regret and guilt. "They must die anyway."
Wu lifted her head. "Why?" Though she had intended to yell, a hiss
was all that escaped her lips.
Ting could no longer meet Wu's gaze. "Because they might
know."
"No!" Wu's arm shot up from her side, and she clasped Ting's
throat. Her fingers closed into the dragon's claw choke, but the
last breath left her lungs before she could crush the mandarin's
larynx.
13
Besieged
Hsuang Yu Po had never thought the odor of roasting meat would make
him so miserable. The smell was rich and sweet, for the meat had
been basted with honey. A desperate longing stirred in his stomach,
and his mouth watered with a hunger that he knew would not be
satisfied.
"Knaves," commented Cheng Han. The tzu's powder-stained face was
drawn with starvation. His good eye bulged from its sunken socket,
but the useless one had receded even farther into his haggard
skull. His breath stank from the internal effects of starvation,
and his k'ai hung off his frame as though his body were an armor
stand.
With the other commanders of the noble armies, the two men stood in
the highest room of Shou Kuan's bell tower. Save for a rough-hewn
table, several benches lining the walls, and a window overlooking
the city's main gate, the room was barren. Even the plastered walls
had never been painted.
The window looked over the gate to the dusty road running from Shou
Kuan to Tai Tung, the location of the emperor's summer palace.
Although the road ran eastward, it entered Shou Kuan from the
south, as was customary. If the main gate had been on any wall but
the southern, it was commonly believed, evil spirits would have
found it easy to enter the city.
Before turning eastward, the road ran seventy yards south and
climbed to the top of a knoll. On top of the knoll stood two
hundred shirtless Tuigan. From the bell tower's window, Hsuang
could barely make out their long braids of hair and the shaven
circles on the tops of their heads.
The half-dressed barbarians were tending fifty large, smoky fires.
Over each fire, huge slabs of meat were roasting. As the enemy
clearly intended, the morning breeze was carrying the smell
directly to Hsuang and the others.
Hsuang tore his eyes away from the tormenting sight. To the right
and left of the bell tower, the city walls were manned by soldiers
of the Twenty-Five Armies. Like Tzu Cheng and the other commanders,
the soldiers appeared gaunt and haggard. To a man, their glassy
eyes were fixed on the smoky fires outside the city. Although the
men's appearance and obvious hunger concerned Hsuang, he was far
from shocked or surprised. In the three weeks since the battle at
Shihfang, nobody had eaten more than a few handfuls of
grain.
After the battle, the Twenty-Five Armies had retreated under cover
of darkness. The Tuigan had followed close behind, preparing to
attack. Fortunately, the peasants had obeyed Hsuang's messengers
and burned their lands that very night. As the noble armies
retreated down the road, their flanks had been protected by blazing
fields. Only a small rearguard had been required to keep the Tuigan
from overtaking them. Most of survivors had reached the safety of
Shou Kuan's walls shortly before dawn.
Up to that point, everything had gone according to Batu's plan, and
Hsuang had remained confident that his son-in-law would overcome
the barbarians. However, the noble's confidence had deteriorated
when his subordinates reported the city's condition. Upon hearing
of the noble armies' defeat, the efficient citizens of Shou Kuan
had obeyed the directive Hsuang had sent before the battle. They
had burned their food stores and fled, leaving the city deserted
and barren.
Hsuang had begun each of the twenty-one days since by cursing
himself for not sending a special messenger to the city prefect. Of
course, his self-derision had done nothing to alleviate his
mistake, and now he was in danger of failing Batu. The troops of
the Twenty-Five Annies were starving. It would not be long before
they lacked the strength to keep the barbarians from the city.
Already, men were dying of hunger, and illness was on the
rise.
Hsuang wondered where his son-in-law was. Two days ago, the tzu had
promised his subordinates that help would arrive soon, but he knew
they placed no faith in that vague reassurance. Unfortunately,
without the Mirror of Shao, he could not contact Batu to ask when
the provincial armies would arrive. Nebulous promises were all he
had available to keep up his men's morale.
Hsuang was the not only one concerned with the army's morale.
Pointing at the dusty knoll outside the gates, Cheng Han said,
"Those cooking fires are within archery range. Let the men occupy
themselves by making the enemy pay for his fun."
Hsuang considered the request, but finally decided against it. "No.
We'll need the arrows when help arrives."
"Of course," Cheng said, bowing modestly. "What could I have been
thinking?" There was a barely concealed look of mockery in his
eyes, but he made no further protest.
Hsuang did not blame the man for his doubt. The gray-haired noble
still had not told his subcommanders that Batu intended to surprise
the Tuigan at Shou Kuan. If the enemy stormed the city and happened
to capture one of the nobles, Hsuang did not want his son-in-law's
plan revealed.
The old lord was beginning to doubt the wisdom of this decision.
Shou nobles did not fear death nearly as much as they feared dying
like cowards. Yesterday, one young lord had actually suggested
mounting a suicidal charge before the pengs grew too weak to fight.
To Hsuang's alarm, several wiser nobles had voiced support for the
young man's idea. The commander wondered how long it would be
before the rest of the lords urged him to choose battle over
starvation.
Considering their restlessness, Hsuang decided it would be wise to
allow his men some fun at the barbarians' expense—providing it
didn't cost too many arrows. Turning to his subordinates, he said,
"On further thought, I think Tzu Cheng is right: we should make the
Tuigan pay for our misery. Each of you may select ten archers. Give
each archer four arrows. We will see which of our armies kills the
most barbarians."
The nobles all smiled and voiced their approval. Within seconds,
each lord was laying wagers that his archers would kill more
barbarians than those of any other army.
Cheng approached Hsuang. "A wise decision," said the scar-eyed
lord. "By tomorrow, our men may be too weak to pull their
bows."
"Let us hope they remain strong a few days longer than that,"
Hsuang countered, catching the tzu's eyes with a meaningful gaze.
"I am confident that help will arrive soon."
Before Cheng could respond, a sentry knocked on the stairway door.
"My lords, it is most urgent!" he called.
Hsuang cast an eye out the tower window to see if the enemy had
moved. The fires on the knoll were smoking more than previously,
but the Tuigan appeared no closer to attack than they had been at
dawn.
"A messenger from Tai Tung has passed through the enemy lines!" the
sentry added.
An incredulous murmur rustled through the room. Hsuang called,
"Bring him in."
The door opened and the guard escorted an exhausted man wearing a
purple, dust-covered waitao into the room. Though he had more flesh
on his bones than the soldiers of the noble armies, the man looked
every bit as drained. His face was pale and weary. Blood seeped
down his brow from beneath a fresh bandage on his head.
Hsuang stepped forward to greet the messenger, but Tzu Cheng held
out a restraining arm. "For all we know, this man is a barbarian
assassin."
The old noble gently pushed Cheng's arm aside. "This is no
barbarian," he said. "This is my steward."
The sentry's eyes widened in shock. Glancing at the wound over
Xeng's brow, the soldier bowed. "Forgive me, Tzu Hsuang. Your
steward knocked at my gate, but when we opened it, there was
nothing there. We saw a blur entering the city, and thought he was
an enemy spy!"
"It is only a cut, and there is nothing to apologize for," Xeng
said to the soldier. He turned to his father. "It was my fault, Tzu
Hsuang. I should have identified myself."
Though he did not feel as magnanimous as his steward, Hsuang
dismissed the guard without punishment. He turned to Xeng,
forgetting himself and holding out his arms to embrace his son.
Fortunately, the younger man suffered no such lapse of decorum and
simply bowed to the lord.
Flushing at his slip, Hsuang returned the gesture of courtesy. "I
am both happy and sad that you have come, Xeng," the old noble
said. "Seeing you again gives me joy, but I regret that you now
share our danger"
"There is nothing to regret, Tzu Hsuang," responded Xeng, using his
dusty sleeve to wipe a trickle of blood from his brow. "When I left
the summer palace, I knew your circumstances. It was my choice to
join you."
As the steward spoke, his knees began to wobble and he looked as if
he might collapse.
"Perhaps you should sit," Hsuang said, directing his son to one of
the benches along the room's stark walls. After Xeng was seated,
Hsuang asked, "What are you doing here? Why aren't you watching
over your mother and Wu?"
Xeng looked away. "I failed," he said. "They're dead."
Hsuang studied his son for a long moment, unable to comprehend what
he was hearing. "Who? Who's dead?"
"Everyone," the steward replied, still unable to meet his father's
gaze. "Ting Mei Wan killed them all."
The old lord backed away as if withdrawing from a leper's presence.
"What are you saying?"
"I couldn't save them," Xeng said, his voice weak with
grief.
Hsuang finally grasped what his son had come to tell him. His eyes
grew vacant and glassy, as if his spirit had fled his body. "Ji and
Yo?" he asked hopefully.
"I have heard that your grandchildren did not suffer. Ting had that
much mercy."
Hsuang's knees buckled. He would have fallen had Cheng not caught
him and helped him to the bench. Though the pained tzu found the
strength to keep from crying out or sobbing, he could do nothing
else but stare into empty space. Finally, the old noble asked,
"Why?"
Xeng turned to face his father. "Before she was killed, Lady Wu
asked me to deliver this to the emperor." He withdrew an ebony tube
from his robe and gave it to his father.
Hsuang took it, then removed two papers from inside. The first was
Wu's letter to the emperor. It explained how she had come by the
second paper, which was Ting Mei Wan's report to the "Illustrious
Emperor of All Peoples."
When he finished reading, Hsuang looked up. In a quivering voice,
he told the other nobles what the letters contained. After the
murmur of astonishment died away, the old lord asked his son, "Why
did you bring these to Shou Kuan?" Though he did not intend it to,
his voice held a note of reproach.
Xeng's lips dropped into a mortified frown. "I didn't know what
else to do. Minister Ting's soldiers had surrounded the emperor,
and she was searching for me in every corner of the summer
palace."
"You could have hidden anywhere in Shou Lung!" Hsuang yelled, his
grief finally overcoming his self-control. "What good do you expect
these letters to do here?"
At Hsuang's outburst, the other nobles uncomfortably shifted their
glances to the wall and stood motionless.
Xeng looked at the floor. "I failed you."
The old noble regarded Xeng for many moments, sorry that he had
taken his anguish out on his son. Finally, Hsuang rolled the papers
and returned them to the tube.
"No," the old noble said, grasping Xeng's shoulder. "You haven't
failed me, but you will return these letters to the summer palace.
See that they reach the emperor. Ting Mei Wan must pay for her
crimes."
"He's wounded!" Tzu Cheng objected. "He won't last a
day!"
Hsuang looked at his son with demanding eyes. "My steward is a
strong man" he said.
"Tzu Hsuang," Cheng said, daring to meet his commander's severe
gaze, "in your grief, you are asking too much of your servant. It
is a wonder he reached us at all. That he could pass back through
the enemy lines wounded is unthinkable."
Xeng returned to his feet. "I will try, if that is what my lord
wishes."
Hsuang gave the ebony tube to his son. "That is what I wish," he
said. The old noble was not being callous or cruel. Hsuang could
not bear the thought of his son being in Shou Kuan if the city
happened to fall before Batu arrived.
"Unless you wish your servant to flee during battle, it may not be
possible to fulfill your wish, Tzu Hsuang," said one of the young
nans. He was looking out the tower window.
"What do you mean?" Hsuang asked, stepping to the nan's
side.
There was no need for the nan to answer. On top of the knoll, two
thousand barbarians sat astride their horses. A stiff wind was
carrying the smoke from the cooking fires directly over the city
wall, partially obscuring Hsuang's view. However, he could see well
enough to know that the horse-warriors wore armor and held bows in
their hands.
Beyond the knoll, at a distance of three hundred yards, a dark band
encircled the city. Hsuang had no doubt that he was looking at the
rest of the barbarian army. As the lord studied the enemy, a short
man carrying a white truce flag separated from the group on the
hill.
The messenger spurred his horse forward, stopping within thirty
yards of the bell tower. Though the rider wore a fine suit of
barbarian armor, his features were slender, with smoothly rounded
cheekbones. The messenger had shaven his head in the fashion of a
monk, and he was thinly built. The man's appearance was clearly not
that of a Tuigan, and Hsuang guessed he might be Khazari.
Without preamble, the rider called, "The mighty khahan has grown
weary of waiting for you to come out and do battle." He spoke the
Shou language with a Khazari accent. "He sends me to accept your
surrender, and offers a meal as proof that he will treat his
prisoners kindly."
Hsuang did not believe the envoy, and would not have considered
surrender even if he had. The old noble had lost his daughter and
grandchildren, but he had not lost his honor. He had promised to
hold Shou Kuan until Batu arrived, and he would do it or die
trying.
"Your khahan underestimates our number," Hsuang yelled back. "He
cannot hope to feed all our armies with so little food."
The rider smiled broadly and without sincerity. "We have been
hunting for many days," he returned. "More than two thousand
dressed beasts await you in our camp."
A murmur ran down the wall as the men repeated the rider's words.
Even the nobles seemed to be discussing the idea of
surrender.
Hsuang turned to his subordinates, completely ignoring the rider
for the moment. "He's lying. They're trying to trick us."
"How do you know?" asked a young nan.
Hsuang pointed out the window. "Do the barbarians look like they
expect us to surrender? They'll attack the instant we leave the
city."
"Then we must fight," another noble replied.
"We are not leaving Shou Kuan!" Hsuang snapped. "That is my
command!"
Many of the nobles met the tzu's gaze directly, indicating their
disagreement with his decision.
"The emperor placed General Batu in command of our armies," Hsuang
said, looking at the nobles who dared to oppose him. "Batu gave me
command of your armies. To defy my word is to defy the emperor's.
Are you prepared to do that?"
It was Cheng Han who replied. "No one would dare defy you, Tzu
Hsuang. Yet, our armies are too weak to last much longer. Soon, we
will have no choice except to surrender or die of starvation.
Perhaps it would be wise to consider fighting now, while the option
is still viable."
Hsuang felt irritated by the words. Although Cheng had questioned
him before, the scarred noble had always yielded when Hsuang
invoked his authority. Despite the man's careful politeness, it
appeared Cheng intended to do no such thing this time.
"I will tell you when we will fight," Hsuang responded through
clenched teeth. "We will fight when the provincial armies arrive to
help us, or when the barbarians storm the city walls. Until then, I
will not throw away our armies by sallying against five-to-one
odds."
"Staying in Shou Kuan to starve is the same as surrendering," Cheng
countered. "If we sally, at least we will kill some
barbarians."
"There is no use discussing the matter further," Hsuang declared.
Though he normally would have handled Cheng with more tact, he was
too upset by the news of Wu's death to deal patiently with the
man's challenge.
Cheng, however, would not be put off. "We wish to die honorably in
battle. It is our right as noblemen."
"It is your right to die when I tell you to," Hsuang snapped,
stepping over to stand face-to-face with the scarred noble. "If you
wish to do it honorably, you will wait until I say it is time to
fight."
With his one good eye, Cheng met Hsuang's angry gaze and did not
flinch. "Your grief is interfering with your judgment, Tzu Hsuang.
Otherwise, I would do as you ask."
A rage boiled up from Hsuang's stomach. As if it belonged to
somebody else, he watched his arm rise and saw his hand lash out.
He struck Cheng's face with an open palm, leaving a red print on
the man's cheek.
"Apologize!" Hsuang ordered.
The nobles stood in awkward and dumbfounded silence, Cheng staring
at his commander with an expression of disbelief. Finally, the
scarred noble said, "It is understandable that you are upset by the
news of your daughter's death, Tzu Hsuang. Nevertheless, we must
look at our options with a clear head." Cheng turned to address the
other nobles. "We must attack now or surrender."
The other lords turned away from Hsuang and gathered around Cheng
Han. Casting nervous glances at their legitimate commander, they
discussed the two options Cheng had proposed.
Slapping the scarred noble had been a mistake, Hsuang realized. The
other lords had interpreted the action as a loss of self-control,
and he had to admit they were correct. Otherwise, he would have
handled Cheng's challenge to his authority with much more tact. He
certainly would never have struck the man.
Nevertheless, he could not allow the nobles to abandon the city
before Batu arrived. "Tzu Cheng," Hsuang said, pushing his way into
the circle surrounding his rebellious subordinate. "Even if what
you say is true, I am still in command of this army. There are no
choices except those I present."
Cheng met his superior's gaze with steady eyes. "That might be true
under normal circumstances," he said, his voice betraying no trace
of anger or indignation. "But it is clear your judgment has been
impaired by your loss. Otherwise, you would realize that we stand
to gain nothing by delaying our final battle. With every hour, we
only grow weaker."
Many nobles murmured their agreement.
Reassured by the show of support, Cheng added, "I am sorry, Tzu
Hsuang. Your orders don't make sense."
Several nobles echoed their reluctant agreement. In their eyes,
Hsuang saw apology and sympathy, but no sign of support. Like
Cheng, they all believed their commander's grief had overcome his
logic.
As far as Hsuang could see, he had only one hope of retaining
command. "You're committing treason," he said to Cheng, taking care
to appear as rational as possible.
The accusation did not daze the scarred noble. "If the emperor or
your own son-in-law were here, they would agree with our decision.
At such a critical time, it's not in Shou Lung's interest to leave
a grieving man in command."
The deft counter overcame any last doubts the nobles retained about
disobeying Hsuang. The group voiced their approval of Cheng's
reasoning, clearly shifting command of the Twenty-Five Armies away
from Hsuang.
The old noble studied his mutinous subordinates for several
moments. Finally, he turned toward the tower door, motioning for
Xeng to follow. Before descending the stairs, however, he paused
and addressed Cheng. "If I may ask, Tzu Cheng, what do you plan to
do?"
Cheng lifted his chin. "Fight." As an afterthought, the scarred
noble added, "Of course, you and your troops are welcome to join
us."
Hsuang shook his head angrily. "I have better uses for my army," he
said. With that, he left the room and abandoned his fellow nobles
to their planning. Though he knew it was impossible to hold the
entire city with only his pengs, he intended to keep his promise to
Batu. Somewhere deep within the city, he would find a compound that
a small force could defend.
As Hsuang and his son descended the stairs, Xeng walked one step
behind his father. Halfway down, the steward stumbled and almost
fell. The old noble stopped and grasped his son's shoulder. The
steward's face looked pale.
"How is your wound, Xeng?" Hsuang asked. "Should I summon
help?"
Xeng shook his head. "I'm a little light-headed, but it's nothing
to worry about."
Hsuang scowled. "Somehow, I doubt that. We'll find someplace safe
for you to recover."
"You don't wish me to leave?" Xeng asked.
Hsuang shook his head. "It would be pointless until those fools
have had their battle, would it not?" He continued down the stairs,
supporting his son by the arm.
When he opened the door and stepped into the street, Hsuang was
surprised to hear the pengs on the walls calling to each other in
alarm. The noble looked up. The soldiers were cocking their
crossbows and staring at the knoll in front of the gate. From the
streets, Hsuang could not see what had alarmed them, so he ran back
up the stairs.
Xeng followed several steps behind, moving more slowly because of
his wound. "What's wrong?" the steward called.
"The enemy must be attacking!" Hsuang answered, glancing over his
shoulder at his son's bandaged head. "Don't strain yourself. I'll
meet you up here."
The gray-haired noble reached the top of the tower a few seconds
later. The other lords barely noticed as he entered the room. They
were too busy overwhelming Cheng Han with contradictory advice.
Hsuang slipped over to the window, peered out, then swore a vile
curse in the name of the Celestial Dragon.
The Tuigan had resorted to magic. A single barbarian stood in front
of the two thousand horsemen gathered on top of the smoky knoll.
The man was dressed in a long silk robe covered with mystic
symbols. In his hand, he held a scepter capped with a human skull.
The barbarian's arms were lifted skyward and his eyes were fixed on
one of the fires.
The shaman had magically braided the smoke from all fifty cooking
fires together. The smoke columns now formed a wide gray ribbon
that stretched from the hilltop all the way to Shou Kuan. The smoky
bridge crossed the city wall directly over the gate, just a few
yards to the right of the bell tower.
As Hsuang watched, the first horsewarriors spurred their mounts
toward the hazy bridge. The frightened animals reared and tried to
shy away. The determined riders kicked the beasts and lashed them
with their reins, guiding the horses onto the gray ribbon as if it
were solid rock. When their hooves found solid purchase on the
smoke, the horses calmed and began galloping forward. The riders
dropped their reins, then pulled their bows from their holsters and
began to nock arrows.
Hsuang turned to his fellow nobles. "Get to your armies!" he
yelled. "The Tuigan are topping the wall!"
The nobles stopped arguing and stared at him with varied
expressions of incomprehension.
"What do you mean?" Cheng Han demanded. "They don't have siege
equipment."
"They don't need it," Hsuang replied, pointing toward the knoll.
"Look!"
When the tzu looked out the window again, sheets of arrows were
sailing back and forth between the smoke bridge and the city walls.
The horsewarriors were already so close that Hsuang could lock eyes
with the lead rider. The barbarian was a ferocious-looking man with
a hungry smile that appeared at once jubilant and brutal. He had a
drooping black mustache, a flat nose with flaring nostrils, and
dark slit-like eyes that sat over broad cheekbones. The rider wore
a filthy, greasy hauberk and a conical skullcap trimmed with matted
fur. He guided his horse with his knees so that both hands were
free to use his bow.
With a sinking heart, Hsuang realized that the Tuigan had tricked
him. The barbarians had never expected the Twenty-Five Armies to
leave the city. The roasting meat and the offer to accept a
surrender had been ruses designed to mask the preparation of the
shaman's smoke bridge.
The plan had worked all too well.
Turning his thoughts to countering the Tuigan plan, Hsuang looked
back to the other nobles. "Send for your best archers," he ordered,
automatically slipping back into his role as the group's commander.
"We've got to kill that shaman—"
Something buzzed through the window and struck Hsuang's ribs like a
hammer blow. His armor clinked once, then a painful vise clamped
down on his chest. He looked out the window and saw that the lead
rider was already passing the bell tower. In preparation for
leaping onto Shou Kuan's ramparts, the warrior was holstering his
bow and drawing his sword.
Hsuang grasped at the arrow lodged in his chest, then collapsed to
the floor. As darkness filled his sight, the tzu heard the clatter
of hooves on stone outside the tower, then the chime of sword
meeting sword told him that the barbarians were inside the
city.
14
Shou Kuan
Batu and a subordinate, General Kei Bot Li, lay on their stomachs
at the crest of a hill. The mordant smell of burned grass filled
their nostrils, and the dry acrid taste of soot coated their
tongues. Normally, they would have avoided lying face down in a
field of ash, but the best place for watching Shou Kuan happened to
be this scorched hilltop.
The three miles of rolling terrain between them and the city was as
black and as barren as the hill. Before fleeing, the citizens of
Shou Kuan had set fire to most of the land surrounding the city.
The barbarians had overgrazed the few fields the peasants had left
untouched, turning them into bleak patches of ground.
The over-grazed land is a good sign, thought the general from
Chukei. By forcing the enemy to siege Shou Kuan, Tzu Hsuang had
greatly complicated the already difficult task of feeding so many
horses and men. The Tuigan would be anxious to complete the siege
and move on to better lands.
From what Batu could see, Yamun Khahan had already reached the end
of his patience. Even now, the barbarians were preparing to attack.
At this distance, the walls of Shou Kuan looked like no more than a
ridge of clay surrounding an anthill. However, a dark band that
could only be an enemy battle formation encircled the city. Batu
guessed that there were over one hundred thousand riders in the
dark ring.
More telling than the riders was the smoke in front of the main
gate. From three miles away, the smoke appeared to be nothing more
than a band of haze, but Batu knew that only a large fire could
create so much fume.
Pointing at the smoke, Batu asked, "What do you make of that, Kei
Bot?"
The stocky general squinted at the gray column and watched it
intently, as if he could magnify the image through obstinate study.
It was a gesture typical of the general, Batu was learning. More
than anything, it seemed to symbolize the headstrong determination
that was the heart of Kei Bot's personality.
After the stocky general's assault on Yenching, Batu had made the
ambitious man second in command. Though he had used the survivors
from Kei Bot's army to garrison Yenching, it would have been an
insult to leave the pudgy general with his troops after he had
displayed so much bravery. Therefore, Batu had been forced to
reward Kei Bot by promoting him.
It was an exigency the General of the Northern Marches regretted.
In order to hold Kei Bot's dogged ambition in check, Batu kept the
pudgy general with him at all times. Unfortunately, the two men did
not enjoy each other's company.
Kei Bot finally finished his study of the smoke column. "I would
guess that they're burning prisoners," he announced.
"To what purpose?" Batu asked, frowning at his
sub-commander.
"Intimidation," Kei Bot answered. "I've seen it before."
Batu shook his head. "They wouldn't hesitate to commit such
butchery, but they don't take captives." He pointed at the riders
encircling the city. "To me, it looks like they're preparing to
attack. The smoke must have something to do with storming the
city."
"If that's what you think," Kei Bot answered stiffly, miffed that
his conclusion had not been accepted. "Shall I send the order to
advance?"
"Not yet," Batu said, still watching the city.
"But we've been here for three hours!" Kei Bot objected.
"We'll wait a while longer." The young general faced the stocky
commander. "If we move before the enemy is fully engaged, it will
stop its attack and turn to meet us."
"From what we saw at Shihfang, the nobles are outnumbered five to
one," Kei Bot countered. "The longer we wait, the greater the
chance the enemy will sack Shou Kuan."
"I know," Batu replied, turning back to the city. "Still, we can't
move until the barbarians are fully engaged."
Kei Bot's jaw dropped in open shock. "The nobles will be wiped out!
They'll never hold against those numbers."
"Don't underestimate the nobles," Batu replied, "not while Tzu
Hsuang still commands them."
At Shihfang, Batu had discovered the reason for his father-in-law's
long silence following the battle: the Mirror of Shao had been
shattered. He was sorry to lose the artifact, but not nearly as
sorry as he would have been to lose Tzu Hsuang. Still, the mirror's
destruction was a serious blow. Batu had been counting on it to
coordinate the attack with the noble armies. Without the Mirror of
Shao, the general had to rely on nothing but his best guess to time
his attack.
More to reassure himself than Kei Bot, Batu said, "Tzu Hsuang will
hold. His pengs have had three weeks of rest. Besides, even if the
Tuigan breach the walls, they will find that city streets are poor
places to fight from horseback."
"Don't you think you're risking Hsuang's armies without sufficient
reason?" Kei Bot asked. "If the nobles collapse, the Tuigan will
retreat into Shou Kuan when we attack."
"I won't lose the advantage of surprise," Batu replied sternly. He
pointed at the ring encircling the city. "From what I can see, the
barbarians still have over a hundred thousand riders. Our only
chance of destroying them is to catch them completely
unprepared."
Kei Bot would not be intimidated. "If you must run this risk, at
least send word to make ready for battle."
Batu scowled, but realized that Kei Bot's suggestion had its
merits. "I see no harm in doing as you ask," he snapped. Without
taking his eyes off the pudgy general, he waved Pe
forward.
The adjutant was waiting at the bottom of the hill, where he and
Batu's fifty man escort would not be seen. It took Pe a few moments
to crawl to the crest of the hill. Upon arriving, he removed his
conical skullcap and scratched furiously at his matted hair. "Now I
understand why the barbarians shave their heads," he
said.
Like Batu and the other men in the provincial armies, Pe was
dressed in Tuigan clothing. In addition to the fur-trimmed
skullcap, he wore a greasy knee-length hauberk and wool trousers.
The hauberk had an arrow hole and a bloodstain in the breast, and
the trousers were so filthy that crawling through ash had done
nothing to darken their color. In contrast to Batu, who felt
strangely comfortable in the clothing, Pe looked awkward and
clumsy.
The adjutant suddenly pulled his hand from his hair. Pinched
between his thumb and forefinger was a white, squirming body the
size of a rice grain. The youth squashed the louse, then wiped his
hand on his pant leg. He renewed his scratching and commented,
"Filthy beasts."
Batu was not sure whether Pe meant the lice or the barbarians.
After the victory at Yenching, Batu had sent his cavalry to round
up the enemy horses. In the meantime, he had instructed the
remainder of the Most Magnificent Army of Shou Lung to clothe
itself in Tuigan garb.
The order had not made the general a popular commander. The thought
of wearing Tuigan clothing had turned the stomachs of the entire
army, even the drunks and criminals. Nevertheless, Batu had
insisted that his command be followed.
Two days later, the cavalry had collected more than eighty thousand
barbarian horses. The number had been sufficient to mount the four
armies that were still in battle condition. After a day of riding
lessons, Batu had started for Shou Kuan with eighty thousand pengs
disguised as Tuigan horse-warriors.
The General of the Northern Marches was wise enough to know that
news of a large Shou army would quickly reach the ears of Yamun
Khahan. That was why Batu had disguised his men as Tuigan. The
presence of another barbarian force would not provoke nearly as
much comment. Even if word of the army reached the khahan, Batu
thought the reports would be less likely to alarm the Tuigan
leader. It seemed possible that the khahan would dismiss the
accounts as mere rumors or exaggerations. The last thing he would
believe, Batu hoped, was that four Shou armies had disguised
themselves as Tuigan in order to sneak up on him.
Unfortunately, in order to make the disguise believable, Batu's men
had to act like barbarians. Several times, his scouts had given
chase to frightened peasants. Once, they had even attacked and
burned a Shou village the barbarians had overlooked. It was then,
Batu realized, that he had begun to feel comfortable in barbarian
clothes.
A few days after burning the village, Batu's outriders had begun to
see signs of far-ranging enemy scouts. Since the khahan had left so
many men in Yenching, Batu had hoped the Tuigan leader would feel
secure and not bother to scout behind him. The general should have
known better, for it was apparent that Yamun Khahan was a careful
commander.
So, for the last three days, Batu's troops had moved only after
sunset and under the heavy cloud cover summoned by the wu jens. The
armies had traveled along streambeds and through secluded valleys,
on routes selected by survey parties during daylight hours. Of
course, the outriders had occasionally encountered smaller parties
of Tuigan scouts. In most cases, the disguises had served the
surveyors well. After a friendly wave, the enemy had simply ridden
away.
Four times, however, enemy patrols had approached Shou scouting
parties. In each instance, Batu's men had ambushed the Tuigan
riders before the scouts realized they were impostors. Not a single
enemy soldier had escaped such a meeting alive.
Last night, the provincial armies had finally reached an isolated
valley in the hills southwest of Shou Kuan. Batu had stopped the
advance five miles from city. At dawn, he had taken a party and
rode forward to scout the enemy.
The army was still waiting in that valley. Even without being
there, Batu felt certain his subordinates were all as impatient as
Kei Bot. The general could hardly blame them. With every hour, the
danger of discovery increased. Already he had received a report
that an enemy scouting party had been destroyed because it had come
too close to the Shou armies. If Tuigan patrols continued to
disappear, Batu knew that the khahan would soon suspect something
was amiss.
Still, with such a capable commander leading the enemy, Batu had to
scout the horsewarriors carefully. Though the Shou armies were also
mounted now, they would be no match for the barbarians in open
combat. The Tuigan carried short bows ideal for fighting from
horseback, and they were uncannily accurate with their weapons.
Batu's soldiers, by contrast, were still equipped with clunky
crossbows and were accustomed to fighting from rigid ranks. Only a
fool would believe that because they now had horses, the Shou would
be a match for the barbarians.
As the General of the Northern Marches had known all along, Shou
Lung's best chance of victory lay in attacking while the enemy's
attention was completely absorbed by something else. That was why
Batu's original plan had called for the nobles to sally out of Shou
Kuan as his forces attacked from the rear. However, with the Mirror
of Shao destroyed, coordinating the two maneuvers had become an
impossibility. Fortunately, it appeared the enemy was about to
oblige Batu by occupying itself with an attack on Shou
Kuan.
Batu directed his attention to Pe. "Tell the armies to prepare for
the attack."
Pe smiled. "Then the war will be over soon."
A knot of excitement formed in Batu's stomach, and he answered,
"One way or the other." With a little luck, he thought he would
finally fight his illustrious battle.
"The enemy still does not know we're here," Pe said, his face
betraying his absolute confidence. "We cannot lose."
"In battle, nothing is ever certain," Kei Bot warned.
Pe looked at the stocky commander with barely concealed contempt.
The adjutant made no secret of his dislike for Batu's second in
command. "Begging your pardon, General, but what you say is not
true for this battle."
Placing a fatherly hand on his adjutant's shoulder, Batu said, "Pe,
the only thing I am sure of today is that we shall fight a great
battle." He reached beneath his hauberk to withdraw the letter he
had written before dawn for Wu. Though he had not been able to send
his customary letter at Yenching, today there was no reason to
break his vow.
Batu gave the paper to Pe. "You know what to do with
this."
"I'll send it to Lady Wu."
Kei Bot raised an eyebrow. "I had not thought you so sentimental,
General."
The General of the Northern Marches flushed. He had repeatedly
directed his subordinates to think of nothing but fighting until
they destroyed the barbarians. Batu felt as if he had been caught
in a lie.
"I'm not," he said sharply, looking from Kei Bot to Pe. "Send the
order."
Pe crawled down the hill to the escort, and Batu turned back to
Shou Kuan. The wind still carried the smoke over the city wall. The
general from Chukei studied the hazy tendril for several moments.
The more he watched, the more it seemed something was moving across
the gray ribbon.
Batu wished that Minister Kwan's wu jen was with him, for the
wizard would have found a way to show him more of the scene outside
Shou Kuan. It was not the first time the general had wished for the
wizard's company. After arriving at last night's campsite, Batu's
first thought had been to establish some magical means of spying
upon the enemy. Unfortunately, none of the wu jens supplied by the
Ministry of Magic knew an appropriate spell, and the feng-li lang
would not ask the spirits to perform such a mundane task. So the
general had been forced to rely upon physical scouting.
Batu watched the scene for another ten minutes. Finally, Kei Bot
pointed at the dark band of horsemen encircling Shou Kuan. "The
enemy is moving! Shall I send the order to advance?"
"Not yet," Batu replied, laying a restraining hand on his
subordinate's wrist. Although it did look as though the barbarian
circle was tightening, Batu did not think they were
charging.
"What are you waiting for?" Kei Bot asked. "As it is, it will take
our armies thirty minutes to reach the battle."
"It won't take the enemy thirty minutes to know we're coming," Batu
countered, pointing toward the valley where the Shou armies waited.
"When eighty thousand horses gallop toward the city, they'll raise
a dust cloud that will blot out the sun. If the Tuigan aren't fully
engaged, they'll break off to meet us."
Kei Bot frowned and stared at Batu. "Your wife's father is in Shou
Kuan. How can you allow the nobles to bear this attack
alone?"
"I can do it because it increases our chances of winning the
battle," Batu returned coldly. He looked back toward the besieged
city.
Kei Bot stared at his commander with thinly veiled disgust. "You
are a callous and cold man."
Without taking his eyes off the city, Batu calmly asked, "Could any
other kind destroy the Tuigan?"
Kei Bot looked away, uncomfortable with both his own comment and
Batu's easy reply.
A moment later, the barbarian circle stopped shrinking. Batu
estimated the horsewarriors were within medium bow range of the
city walls. Though he could not see them, the general knew that
droves of arrows were flying between Shou Kuan's ramparts and the
enemy lines.
"See?" Batu said, pointing at the circle. "The Tuigan would have
seen us coming. It won't be long now."
The general could see that the Tuigan were pressing the battle
hard. Volley after volley of Shou arrows opened holes in their
ring, but instead of retreating to a safer range, the barbarians
shifted to fill in the gaps. In front of the gate, the smoke still
drifted over the city wall. It still seemed to Batu that something
was moving along its spine, but he could not imagine
what.
For several minutes, he and Kei Bot silently watched the battle.
The longer they watched, the more convinced Batu grew that he had
made the correct decision. The enemy maneuvered with such precision
that he knew they would easily meet any obvious attack.
On the southern side of the city, the horsewarriors began to gather
in a great mass. Within seconds, the throng was swarming toward the
main gate.
"They're assaulting!" Kei Bot declared, pointing at the mob.
"They've taken the gate!"
"Yes," Batu agreed, waving his adjutant up the hill. For the first
time since the battle had begun, he was worried. The barbarians had
breached Shou Kuan's defenses much faster than he had
expected.
When Pe arrived, the general from Chukei addressed the youth
immediately. "Send the order to attack," he said. "The Army of
Wak'an is to secure the western perimeter and the Army of Hai Yuan
the eastern, cutting off any avenue of enemy retreat. The Army of
Kao Shan is to smash the throng at the gate, with the Army of Wang
Kuo in close support."
"Yes, General," Pe said. He started back down the hill.
Batu grabbed his adjutant's shoulder. "Deliver these orders
yourself. Remind the generals that no one is to attack from
horseback. They are to dismount and fight in formation. After all,
we must remember that we aren't true barbarians, mustn't
we?"
Pe smiled. "Yes, General."
"Now, go," Batu said, turning back to the city.
After watching the assault for a few moments, the general from
Chukei realized that something was terribly wrong inside the city.
The Tuigan throng in front of the gate was decreasing in size at a
steady rate.
Batu's heart sank. What he saw could only mean that the barbarians
were pouring into the city with little opposition. When his
provincial armies sprang their trap, the enemy would simply take
refuge inside the walls of Shou Kuan.
Rising to his feet, Batu said, "Come, General!"
Kei Bot also rose, saying, "Why such a hurry now?"
"You were right," Batu said, starting down the hill.
"Of course—"
"Now is not the time to offend me," Batu said sharply, halting. "It
would be a pity to execute you while you can still serve the
emperor."
The stocky general stopped in his tracks. "You wouldn't
dare!"
"I would," Batu hissed. "At the moment, I have enough on my mind
without your perfidy."
Kei Bot clenched his jaw and stared at Batu angrily. When the
younger man's gaze did not falter, Kei Bot asked, "What do you
want?"
Batu grasped his subordinate's shoulder and guided him down the
hill, formulating a new plan as he walked. "We can prevent the
barbarians from seizing Shou Kuan if we move quickly. We'll follow
them straight into the city."
Batu spoke rapidly, his excitement growing with each breath.
Although the nobles' collapse had caused him some serious problems,
he was determined to overcome these troubles. After all, a battle
could hardly be considered illustrious if a commander did not make
a desperate decision or two.
"Here's my plan," Batu said, still gripping his subordinate's arm.
"I'll meet the Armies of Kao Shan and Wang Kuo to change their
orders. We'll mount a cavalry charge and follow the barbarians
right into the city."
"To attack inside Shou Kuan?" Kei Bot gasped.
"Exactly," Batu confirmed. "The Tuigan are horsemen and nomads.
City combat will be as foreign to them as fighting from horseback
is to us. The odds should be even."
Kei Bot stared at the General of the Northern Marches as if he were
mad. "What do you wish me to do?"
"We'll need all the strength we can gather inside the city," Batu
explained. "You must meet the other two armies. Send the Army of
Wak'an to support the charge. They must also remain mounted and
follow on my heels, or the assault will lack the momentum to take
the city."
Kei Bot nodded. "Wak'an is to follow you, and you will be with Wang
Kuo."
"Good," Batu said. "You must take the last army and encircle the
city at one hundred and twenty yards. Use your horses' mobility to
make sure that no stragglers escape our trap."
"As you wish," Kei Bot answered, unable to hide his
skepticism.
They reached the bottom of the hill. Batu turned to face Kei Bot
straight on. "One other thing," he said. "If I fall, you will take
command."
At first, Kei Bot's expression seemed puzzled, for Batu was merely
stating standard military procedure. Slowly, however, he realized
the full implication of his commander's words. "You expect to be in
the thick of the fighting?" Kei Bot asked. There was an ambitious
glimmer in his eye.
"I'll be in the cavalry charge," Batu answered, hardly able to
suppress a grin. "Once inside the city, our armies will need me."
Though this logic seemed valid enough, the general from Chukei had
a deeper reason for joining the charge. He simply did not want to
miss the best part of the battle.
For a long moment, Kei Bot studied Batu with an unreadable
expression. Finally, he asked, "Anything else?"
"Only this: whether I was right or wrong to hold the attack, our
best chance of victory now lies in the streets of Shou Kuan. I hope
you agree."
"Whether I agree or not is unimportant," Kei Bot said, turning away
to mount his horse. "I have my orders."
Batu mounted his own horse, wondering if the stocky general could
be trusted. There was something in the man's manner that made the
general from Chukei uneasy, but there was no time to worry about it
now. Batu spurred his horse, leading Kei Bot and the remaining
escorts in a mad gallop toward his armies.
Batu and the others rode down into a dale. Even sitting astride his
horse, the general from Chukei could feel the ground trembling.
Behind the blackened ridge on the valley's far side, an immense
dust cloud eclipsed the horizon. Realizing that his army's approach
army was responsible for what he saw and felt, Batu reined his
mount to a stop.
A line of riders nearly a mile long appeared atop the far ridge and
started into the valley. Within seconds, the slope was covered with
horsemen wearing filthy hauberks and fur-trimmed skullcaps. Most
had scarves or shreds of cloth wrapped around their noses and
mouths. Though the swarm was riding at only a canter, their mounts'
hooves churned up so much dirt that an impenetrable curtain of dust
hid the largest part of the army.
The throng was roughly divided into four groups. One hundred men
from each group held Tuigan standards that the Shou had substituted
for their own banners.
Batu pointed at one of the standard-bearers. "There is Wak'an,
General. Do not fail me." He could barely make himself heard above
the rumble of the approaching army.
Kei Bot galloped off without another word. Batu remained a moment
longer, searching for the golden yak tail that now served as Wang
Kuo's banner. Finally, he found the standard he sought and spurred
his horse forward.
As soon as Batu wheeled his horse into line, dust and ash coated
his throat so thickly he could hardly swallow. Filthy as it was, he
pulled the collar of his Tuigan tunic over his face. He found Wang
Kuo's lanky commander as the army started up the other side of the
valley. Shouting to make himself heard, he explained the change in
plans. A messenger was then sent to the Army of Kao Shan with the
new orders.
Finally, the Shou armies crested the ridge. The twenty thousand
pengs from Kao Shan were in the lead, followed by Batu and the Army
of Wang Kuo. The general from Chukei could no longer see the armies
of Wak'an and Hai Yuan, but he assumed they were close
behind.
A quarter mile ahead, ten thousand mounted Tuigan sat in a double
line at the base of the ridge. They had turned to face Batu's army
and held their bows in their laps. Beyond their lines rose a dusty
knoll with fifty smoky fires burning on top of it. Several hundred
men stood on the hill, still tending the fires. Past the hillock
stood Shou Kuan's bell tower. The main gates hung wide open, and
the streets beyond were filled with thousands of
soldiers.
A flat arc of smoke nearly twenty yards wide ran from the hilltop
over the city walls. Though nothing moved on the smoke bridge now,
several dead horses and men lay strewn along its length. Batu felt
sick as he realized how easy it must have been for the barbarians
to charge over the bridge and secure the main gate.
The general turned his attention back to the first obstacle between
him and retaking the gate: the ten thousand barbarians at the base
of the ridge. As the Shou army started down the slope, the Tuigan
signal drummers beat a slow, steady cadence. The other
horsewarriors remained impassive and motionless, not even lifting
their bows. Finally, a scowling officer rode out and angrily waved
his arms at the advancing army, ordering it to halt.
A wave of euphoria coursed through Batu's veins. The Tuigan don't
know that they're being attacked, he realized. Obviously, the
barbarians were puzzled by the huge army's sudden appearance behind
them, but they clearly did not suspect that it was not their
own.
Wang Kuo turned to Batu, grinning. "What are your orders,
General?"
The question was rhetorical. Even as Batu yelled "Charge!" the men
leading the assault drew their weapons and broke into a full
gallop. Instead of the curved blades of Tuigan warriors, they held
the straight chiens of Shou infantrymen. Upon seeing the
double-edged swords, the enemy officer realized his mistake. He
hurriedly returned to his own ranks. Once combat was closed, Batu
knew, the difference in weapons would be the only means of telling
friend from foe.
As the Army of Kao Shan roared its battle cry, a deafening clamor
filled the general's ears. Batu's heart started to pound harder.
His horse snorted with excitement, and the ground rushed past its
hooves at a dizzying rate.
At the bottom of the slope, the Tuigan raised their bows and fired.
The volley seemed to hang in the air like a black fog. The wall of
arrows didn't seem to fly at the attacking Shou; they seemed to
ride into it. Thousands of men and beasts fell to the dusty ground,
and the charge faltered for just an instant.
Then it continued faster than ever. Sweat rolled down Batu's body
in constant, tickling rivulets. At the bottom of the hill, he saw
the Tuigan holster their bows and draw their sabers. Batu found his
palm gripping his weapon's hilt, and he did something he had not
done in many, many battles: he drew his sword.
The Army of Kao Shan met the barbarians, and Batu felt a thunderous
crash in the pit of his stomach. Ahead of him, thousands of Tuigan
tumbled from their saddles as the heavy Shou chiens struck them
down. An instant later, the Tuigan sabers flashed, cutting down a
like number of Shou. Frightened cries and agonized screams filled
the air. Batu's horse galloped even faster, drawn onward, it
seemed, by the scent of blood and death.
As he rode toward the mayhem ahead, Batu realized he had become an
ordinary soldier. His escorts had disappeared into the mad mob, as
had the commander of Wang Kuo. To the general's left rode a rugged
veteran with unkempt hair who would not have looked out of place
holding a Tuigan saber. To Batu's right rode a helmetless man with
the silky topknot of a Shou officer.
Batu no longer saw the barbarian ranks, for he had reached the
bottom of the slope and did not have a good view. Directly ahead,
all he could see were the backs of his own men. Beyond them rose
the knoll with the smoke bridge. Thousands of his pengs were
already riding up the small hill. Hundreds sat slumped in their
saddles, wounded or dead, carried along only by the momentum of the
charge. On top of the hill, a lone Tuigan wearing the robes of
shaman gestured madly at the smoke bridge. The priest's escorts
were fleeing in all directions.
Batu's horse began swerving and leaping, compelling him to pay
attention to his riding. He had reached the Tuigan ranks, though
little remained of the enemy lines now. The ground was littered
with dead and wounded, forcing the general's mount to dodge wildly
to keep from tripping.
As the general flashed through the area, a barbarian rose and
fumbled at his arrow quiver. Batu swung his sword. The general was
surprised at how good it felt to slay an enemy, for it had been
many years since he had fought in the ranks. He did not get to see
the Tuigan fall, however, for his mount had already carried him
onward.
Batu's horse started up the knoll, and its gait slowed. He took
advantage of the curbed pace to peer over his shoulder, then cursed
angrily. He had expected to see a third army behind the one with
which he rode. Instead, Wak'an was moving toward the western
perimeter and Hai Yuan toward the eastern. Clearly, Kei Bot had not
informed the armies' commanders of the revised plan.
Batu briefly wondered whether Kei Bot had deliberately disobeyed
his orders or had simply not found the other two generals in time.
Whatever the reason, the blunder meant that Wang Kuo and Kao Shan
would be outnumbered once they entered the city. There was nothing
Batu could do. Stopping the assault was out of the question, as was
trying to break a messenger free of the charging mob.
Batu did not panic. Once he entered the city, he could send a
messenger to fetch Wak'an. As long as his forces held the gate, the
delay wouldn't cause him much trouble.
The general reached the hilltop. His horse dodged left to avoid a
smoky fire over which hung a blackened side of lamb. To Batu, the
knoll seemed a strange place to set up a cookfire, but he gave the
matter no more thought.
Ahead, the smoke bridge collapsed, spilling dozens of bodies onto
the pengs below. Men and horses tumbled in all directions, but the
Army of Kao Shan did not slow. The lead ranks closed to within
thirty yards of the gate. Barbarian arrows began to pour down from
the bell tower and the city's ramparts. A column of Tuigan riders
rushed away from the gate to meet the Shou charge head to
head.
A moment later, Batu saw another group of horsewarriors—perhaps
five thousand in all—ride toward the gate. This second group passed
easily through the Tuigan rushing to meet the Shou charge.
Immediately, he knew the retreating formation was the khahan's
bodyguard, for they were uniformly dressed in fine black armor and
rode white horses. Even the wealthiest emperor could only afford to
outfit his best troops in such a manner.
Apparently, the general from Chukei realized, Yamun Khahan had
still been outside Shou Kuan when the Shou attacked. The barbarian
emperor had probably been waiting for his men to wipe out the last
pockets of resistance before entering the city.
As Batu started down the hill, clanging steel and furious yells
sounded from the base of the knoll. The Army of Kao Shan had met
the enemy charge.
On the city walls, the Tuigan archers shifted their fire toward the
charging Shou. Arrows began raining down around Batu. A scream
sounded nearby, then the veteran to the general's left tumbled out
of his saddle.
A black streak flashed past Batu's head, then something slapped the
leather armor over his collarbone. He gasped in alarm, but felt no
pain. Instinctively, he transferred his reins to his sword arm and
felt for a wound with his free hand. He found a deep cut in the
leather where an arrow had grazed his hauberk. As he realized how
close he had come to perishing, the general's chest
tightened.
In the next instant, he left the deadly shower of arrows and
entered the melee in front of the gate. A rider leveled a saber at
his head. The general dropped his reins and raised his tao in a
desperate block. As the two swords met, a terrific jolt ran along
his arm. The barbarian found himself holding the hilt of a broken
sword. Batu countered with a slash and felt his blade cut through
the man's leather armor.
Screaming, the Tuigan slid out of his saddle.
Batu grasped at his loose reins, but lost them. He was unsettled by
the thought of having no control over his beast during the melee,
but another barbarian slashed at him and the general gave up any
hope of recovering the reins.
Batu turned the enemy blow aside, then slipped his blade along the
Tuigan's shoulder and opened a wound in the enemy's throat. The
barbarian gurgled and dropped his weapon, then kicked his horse
onward. The melee became a whirl of flashing blades and dying men.
Time after time, Batu blocked and countered, more often than not
barely aware of whom he was fighting. Once, he barely ducked a blow
from a soldier he had thought to be Shou until the man's curved
blade sailed past his head. Twice, only the glimpse of a
double-edged chien stopped him from slaying one of his own
men.
As the general lifted his aching arm for what felt like the
thousandth time, the deep reverberating rumble of Tuigan signal
drums rolled from the city. Batu's opponent sliced at him with a
wild cross-body swing, then wheeled his horse around and sprang
away. The man was out of reach before the general could
react.
To all sides, the Tuigan were following the lead of Batu's
adversary and turning away from the battle. A few pengs reacted
quickly, downing the fleeing horsewarriors with vicious hacks or
beheading them with efficient slashes. More often, however, the
stunned Shou found themselves swinging at empty air while their
foes galloped toward the city gates.
An instant later, a spontaneous shout of triumph rose from the Shou
pengs. Though Batu suspected otherwise, to his soldiers the sudden
withdrawal seemed as though the enemy had been routed. Screaming
their war cries, the Shou tried to pursue.
When they set their heels to their horses, however, the result was
pandemonium. Like Batu, most of them had dropped their reins during
the battle, so they had little control over the excited beasts. The
horses bolted in all directions, crashing into each other or
sprinting away from the throng altogether.
Anxious to avoid being carried away by the anarchy plaguing his
ranks, Batu quickly recovered his own horse's reins. Once he felt
in control of his mount, he turned his attention to Shou Kuan. The
last of the Tuigan were slipping between the closing gates. There
was no sign of Yamun Khahan or his bodyguard, and Batu realized
that the enemy commander had reached the relative safety of the
city.
The battle, for now, was over. Dead and wounded soldiers, both
Tuigan and Shou, blanketed the ground between the knoll and the
gate. Already, over a hundred pengs had dismounted and were
efficiently dispatching the Tuigan wounded. It did not even cross
their minds to take prisoners, save for the few officers who would
prove useful for interrogation.
Atop the walls of Shou Kuan, thousands of Tuigan had gathered on
the ramparts to watch the slaughter of their wounded comrades.
Their faces betrayed no anger or shock, only cool detachment. Batu
had no doubt that if the horsewarriors had been the ones outside
the city, they would have done the same thing to the Shou
survivors.
As the general scanned Shou Kuan's rampart, however, he was
interested in more than Tuigan faces. He was searching the
brick-lined walls for a weakness that he could use to bring a quick
end to the coming siege.
As Batu studied the fortifications, the Tuigan on the ramparts
raised their bows. An instant later, a rain of black-shafted arrows
brought an end to his inspection. Amidst a chorus of anguished
wails and cries, he wheeled his horse about and galloped away from
the city gate.
15
A Caged Tiger
The morning sun touched the exterior of the tent, kindling an
orange light inside. In his ire last night, Batu had driven away
the engineers before they could stake the pavilion, so now its
unsecured flaps slapped wildly in the late summer wind. The
general's silk shirt was soaked with sweat, but he barely noticed.
As he had been doing since before dawn, he stood motionless,
staring out the tent's door.
The pavilion rested on a ridge overlooking Shou Kuan, giving Batu a
clear view of the city's walls and towers. The general was trying
to think of a way to bypass those fortifications, but he kept
losing his thoughts. Over sixty thousand dead and wounded soldiers,
both Shou and Tuigan, lay in front of the city. They had fallen in
a triangular pattern that reminded Batu of an arrow pointing at the
main gate.
A cloud of vultures and other carrion birds were already savoring
the feast, Tuigan archers stood atop the bell tower, using tethered
arrows to pick off the fattest birds. They were meeting with
uncanny success, but the horsewarriors' accuracy did not surprise
Batu. Yesterday, after the gate had closed on his unsuccessful bid
to take the battle into the city, the enemy archers had killed ten
thousand of his men in less than a minute. Given the precision of
the barbarian bows, Batu counted himself lucky to be alive. He had
dropped his sword as he fled, but that seemed a small price to pay
for his life.
The other generals who had also ridden in the charge had not been
so fortunate, however. Wang Kuo's general lay outside, awaiting a
proper cremation. Kao Shan's fate remained unknown, though it was
hardly a mystery. If the general had still been alive, someone
would have brought him to the pavilion by now. The commanders of
the Armies of Wak'an and Hai Yuan had both survived, for they had
not been involved in the charge. They were seated on the far side
of the tent, waiting for their new orders.
Kei Bot was not present, but Batu doubted that his
second-in-command had fallen in battle, for the general should have
been nowhere near the heavy fighting. Batu suspected Kei Bot was
intentionally avoiding him, fearing retribution for his part in
yesterday's setback. The tactic irritated Batu almost as much as
the failure itself, so the general from Chukei had sent his
adjutant to find the missing commander.
The same suspicion kept returning to Batu's mind: Kei Bot had
deliberately neglected to give Wak'an the new orders. If so, the
stocky general from Hungtze had committed a terrible military
crime. Worse, he had lost the fight for Shou Lung and robbed Batu
of his illustrious battle.
The General of the Northern Marches turned away from the door.
Across the room, both of his subordinate generals rose to their
feet expectantly.
Addressing the commander from Wak'an, Batu asked, "What did Kei Bot
tell you yesterday?"
The two first degree generals cast uneasy glances at each other.
Wak'an asked, "When, my commander?"
"Before the battle!" Batu snapped, pointing at Shou Kuan. "When do
you think?" Despite his lack of patience, the general understood
the man's caution. When a plan went awry, Shou commanders often
selected subordinates to serve as scapegoats, as Kwan had selected
Batu himself after the battle of the sorghum field.
To reassure his subcommanders, Batu said, "Have no fear. The blame
for this disaster rests on my shoulders alone, but I must know what
went wrong."
Wak'an relaxed. "He said you were going to charge the
city."
"And?" Batu prompted.
"He was to assume command until you returned."
Batu's stomach churned at the thought of Kei Bot commanding his
armies. "Anything else?"
Wak'an shook his head.
As Batu started to ask his next question, he heard a small force of
riders approach the pavilion and stop outside. A moment later, Pe
entered the tent and bowed.
"General Kei," the adjutant announced.
The general from Hungtze bustled into the pavilion behind Pe. Kei
Bot's bow was very shallow, and Batu did not bother to acknowledge
it.
Instead, he turned back to the general from Wak'an. "Did General
Kei tell you to follow me into the city?"
Before the man could answer, Kei Bot stepped forward and
interrupted. "I did not."
When Batu turned toward him, the stocky general met his commander's
gaze with a defiant stare. "I thought it best to hold both Wak'an
and Hai Yuan in reserve," Kei Bot continued, sneering at Batu.
"Your plan was foolhardy and suicidal."
"You cost us the battle," Batu countered. "If Wak'an had been
behind the Army of Wang Kuo, we would have overwhelmed the
barbarians and taken the gate."
Kei Bot ignored his commander and shifted his gaze to the other two
generals. "When the barbarians massed for the attack, General Batu
ignored my advice and refused to strike. Instead, he delayed until
the city had all but fallen. Hoping to correct his mistake, our
commander ordered a desperate charge. It was my duty to save what I
could of our armies. At least the enemy is now trapped within Shou
Kuan's walls."
"Until he chooses to leave," Pe retorted.
"Mind your place, young fellow!" Kei Bot snapped, barely sparing
the adjutant a sidelong glance.
Batu did not immediately leap to Pe's defense, for he was pondering
his subordinate's strategy. He had expected Kei Bot to make excuses
or lie about his failure yesterday. Instead, the stocky commander
seemed proud of his disobedience.
Without speaking, Batu stepped forward and stood face-to-face with
his mutinous subordinate. In a quick, fluid motion, the General of
the Northern Marches pulled Kei Bot's sword from its
scabbard.
Staring at his sword's bejewelled hilt, Kei Bot gasped, "What is
the meaning of this?"
"You have deliberately disobeyed my orders, and now you're
fostering rebellion," Batu said, his voice cold and even. "That is
treason."
"The emperor himself gave me command of the Army of Hungtze!" Kei
Bot retorted, reaching for his weapon. "You wouldn't dare suspend
my commission!"
Batu sidestepped the clumsy lunge, then brought the blade up and
drew it across the stocky general's throat. "The penalty for
treason is death," he said.
Kei Bot clasped a hand over the wound, his mouth open in
astonishment. The surprised mutineer dropped to his knees, blood
oozing from between his fingers. Finally, he collapsed and pitched
forward onto the dirt floor.
"What have you done?" gasped Wak'an.
"Kei Bot disobeyed a direct order," Batu replied, nonchalantly
cleaning the sword on the fallen man's k'ai. "He cost us the
victory."
"Perhaps," countered Hai Yuan, "but to execute a general without a
formal inquiry...."
Batu shrugged, then sheathed Kei Bot's ornate sword in his own
empty scabbard. "He admitted his crimes," the general said wearily.
"I have chosen his punishment."
Killing Kei Bot had cleared Batu's mind, and he finally felt as if
he could concentrate. "Pe, get me some brushes and paper," he said,
walking over to an empty table. "From what the prisoners say, there
are over a hundred thousand Tuigan inside the city. We'd better do
some planning."
Batu's two subordinates simply stared at him, astounded by his
indifference to the man he had just executed. When they did not
follow their superior to the table, the general from Chukei said,
"Gentlemen, your thoughts may prove valuable."
Both men shook their heads as if to clear them, then joined Batu.
While Pe supervised the removal of Kei Bot's body, the three
surviving generals fell into a discussion of logistics, debating
the best type of shelters to build for the months ahead, where they
could secure a steady food supply, how their soldiers would fuel
cooking and, eventually, heating fires, and a hundred other
details.
By the end of the week, the Shou were making considerable progress
toward establishing a siege camp. A group of scouts found a bank of
clay on the shore of a nearby river, so the Chief of Works built
kilns to fire bricks. Without straw or something similar to add to
the mix, the bricks would not hold together very long. That did not
trouble Batu, for he needed them to last only a few months. Win or
lose, the siege would be over by winter.
Just outside arrow range, under the guidance of the engineers, the
Army of Hai Yuan was encircling the city with a trench that would
eventually become a defensive fortification. The Master of Ample
Supplies solved the fuel problem by developing a program to collect
dried horse dung, reserving the small supply of wood within riding
of distance of camp for firing the kilns.
Still, the Shou could not solve all their problems easily. Batu
sent a messenger to the summer palace asking for artillery and
reinforcements, but he knew it would be at least six weeks before
any substantial aid arrived. Food was especially scarce, for the
barbarians had been camped outside Shou Kuan for nearly a month. To
procure even small amounts of provisions, the Shou foraging parties
had to travel over one hundred miles. When the riders did find a
village that might have some grain, the lookouts mistook the filthy
pengs for barbarians and burned the communal food-stores.
Batu and his subordinates were in his tent discussing these
problems when Pe entered. "Excuse me, General," the adjutant said,
bowing low. "The Tuigan have dispatched a messenger and ten escorts
under a flag of truce."
The two first degree generals raised their eyebrows. "One thing is
for certain," said Wak'an. "The enemy isn't surrendering this
soon."
"Not ever," Batu replied. From the stories of his greatgrandfather,
he knew that the Tuigan did not ask or grant mercy. That knowledge
only made him more curious about what the envoy had to say. "Bring
the messenger to my pavilion."
Pe bowed, then turned to execute the order.
While he waited for the messenger, Batu supervised the
rearrangement of the pavilion. The barbarians, he knew, were
careful observers, and he wanted the messenger to return to Yamun
Khahan properly impressed. The General of the Northern Marches had
his chair placed in the center of the room. His subordinates'
chairs were placed to either side and slightly to the rear of his
own. Finally, he had fifty senior officers summoned to the tent.
After arranging them in a standing circle, he explained that no
matter what he said or did, they were to remain solemn and
perfectly quiet.
A few minutes later, Pe entered the tent. Bowing very low, the
adjutant said, "With your permission, General, I present the Grand
Historian of the Tuigan Empire, Koja the Lama."
Batu nodded, then Pe opened the tent flap. Koja was not the stocky,
fierce figure Batu had expected. Instead, the lama was a small wiry
man with a priest's shaven head. His bulky armor hung off his
hunched shoulders like rags on a beggar. He moved forward at an
overly confident pace, studying his environment with alert,
intelligent eyes.
Behind Koja came ten Tuigan warriors. They all wore black k'ai
armor and skullcaps trimmed in sable fur. Their swords remained in
their scabbards.
Batu nodded to the messenger's escorts. "Who are they?"
"My bodyguard," the messenger replied in stilted Shou. "The khahan
insisted. I am his anda, you see."
Because Batu spoke the Tuigan language, he knew that by anda, the
messenger meant he was Yamun Khahan's brother in spirit. Koja was
politely informing the general that killing him would anger the
khahan. Batu found it interesting that the lama thought he should
be concerned about the khahan's temper.
"Your bodyguards will wait outside," Batu responded, frowning at
the messenger. "If I decide to kill you, a hundred times that many
men will not save your life."
The lama studied Batu with a dubious expression. When the Shou
commander's face remained fixed, Koja turned to the bodyguards and,
speaking in Tuigan, told them to wait outside. The frowning
warriors reluctantly obeyed.
As soon as the escort was gone, Batu addressed his adjutant. "Have
the bodyguards killed."
Pe barely stopped short of gasping when Batu narrowed a warning eye
at him. The other officers in the room showed no emotion, though
Batu felt certain they were as shocked as his adjutant.
"We came under a flag of truce!" Koja sputtered.
The only response to the lama's objection was Pe leaving the room
to execute the order.
"The khahan will—"
"You need no bodyguard in my camp, historian," Batu interrupted,
resting his elbows on the arms of his chair. "The escort was an
insult."
Batu did not truly find the bodyguard insulting. The general simply
wanted to impress upon the khahan that he was not afraid to fight.
Doing something so deliberately provocative would send that
message.
Outside the tent, there were several screams and thuds. A Tuigan
warrior stumbled into the pavilion, three crossbow bolts protruding
from his back. Two Shou soldiers followed and cut him down with
their chiens. The lama watched the display with an expression of
revulsion and utter disbelief.
A moment later, the scuffle outside ended. Pe returned and bowed to
indicate that he had executed the order. As two guards dragged the
dead Tuigan from the tent, Batu said, "Now, anda-to-the-khahan, you
may deliver your message."
Koja's face went white. Nevertheless, he looked Batu in the eye.
"On behalf of Yamun Khahan, Ruler of the World and Illustrious
Emperor of All Peoples, I am here to accept your
surrender."
Many of the Shou officers could not stop from snickering. Batu saw
nothing funny about the khahan's message, for he was keenly aware
that the Tuigan warriors outnumbered his pengs three-to-two.
Nevertheless, he purposely turned up his lips in what he hoped
would appear an amused and confident smile. A few moments later, he
frowned as if remembering decorum. He scowled at his troops to
quiet them.
After the pavilion returned to silence, Batu said, "Tell Yamun
Khahan that we have no use for surrender. Our only interest is his
death."
Koja grimaced at the words, obviously envisioning his master's fury
when he delivered the Shou response.
Batu dismissed the lama with a wave of his hand, then looked to Pe.
"Give Koja his bodyguard's heads to take to the khahan. We would
not want Yamun Khahan to think that his men surrendered instead of
fighting." Batu did not truly think that Yamun Khahan would doubt
his guards' loyalty. He was just trying to make their deaths as
striking as possible, thereby giving the Tuigan leader something to
think about besides strategy.
The adjutant bowed. "As you wish, my commander." He moved forward
to take the lama away.
As soon as Pe escorted the messenger from the room, Batu turned to
his subcommanders. "Prepare for battle," he said. "Position the
Armies of Wak'an and Hai Yuan in front of the gates."
A buzz filled the tent as the officers moved to obey.
"An ingenious plan," commented Hai Yuan, rising. "We can't storm
the city, so you're provoking the enemy into leaving it."
"That is not my intention at all," Batu replied, taking the time to
address both of his surviving subcommanders. "We must not forget
that there are one hundred thousand Tuigan and only sixty thousand
Shou. Sooner or later, the barbarians will get hungry and decide to
leave. If we're going to win the battle that follows, we'll need
time to ring them in with our fortifications."
"Then why insult the messenger?" Hai Yuan asked. "Provoking the
enemy will only make him attack sooner."
"That is where you are mistaken," Batu replied, a wry smile on his
lips. "Do you think he really expected us to surrender? He sent the
messenger to spy upon our camps and to see whether I was confident
or afraid. By insulting the messenger, I told the khahan I was
confident, that I wanted to fight. If he believes I want him to
attack, he will wait."
"How can you be sure?" asked Wak'an, furrowing his brow
skeptically. "Is it not possible that he will see through your
ruse?"
"It is," Batu admitted. "That is why we must be ready for
battle."
The next week was a tense one. The barbarians kept a large force on
the walls and fired at anyone careless enough to enter the archers'
range. The Shou kept one army on watch at all times, while the
others prepared the trench around the city to receive its
fortifications. At the same time, the survivors from the Army of
Kao Shan spent the daylight hours laboring in distant woods or at
the kilns, making bricks and sharpening poles. They were careful to
stockpile these materials behind ridges and hills where they could
not be seen by the Tuigan.
Yamun Khahan would not be concerned by a trench, Batu knew, for the
Tuigan horses could easily jump over or into a simple ditch.
However, when the khahan realized the Shou were building a
defensive wall, the barbarian commander would try to attack before
the fortification could be completed. Batu intended to rob his
counterpart of this opportunity. By preparing the wall's
foundations in advance, the Shou general hoped to erect it in a
single night.
Seven days later, the ditch was ready to receive its
fortifications, and the survivors from the Army of Kao Shan had
stockpiled enough sharpened poles to ring the city. Batu was
inspecting the trench that evening, silently lamenting the fact
that there was still a shortage of bricks, when the city gate
opened.
The lama rode out, waving a white flag. This time, he was
alone.
Before Koja could approach the trench, Batu took twenty guards and
went to meet him. By riding into Tuigan archery range, he was
taking a big risk, but he did not want the lama to see the
preparations in the trench.
As the two men approached each other, the guards formed a ring
around both of them. Koja ignored the soldiers and continued
straight toward Batu, stopping only when their mounts stood nose to
nose. The lama's horse looked haggard and hungry, its ribs visible
beneath its hide. Across his saddle, the messenger carried two
large bags. The general almost gagged as a rancid odor filled the
air.
"What news do you bring from our city?" Batu asked, eyeing the lama
appraisingly. Koja's cheeks were hollow and sunken, and there were
deep circles beneath his eyes. Clearly, the messenger had not eaten
much in the last week.
The little man's horse pawed at the dirt, then dropped its muzzle
and began gnawing at the barren ground. Koja pulled on the reins,
but the starving beast would not be denied its futile search for
stray grass roots. After a moment, Koja gave up on the horse, then
took one of the bags off his saddle and turned it over.
Five heads fell to the ground. Though they were in the early stages
of decomposition, Batu could easily see that they had once belonged
to Shou soldiers. Koja's starving horse nuzzled a head and decided
it was no good to eat, then went back to pawing at the ground in
search of food.
Before the general could say anything, the lama overturned the
second bag. Another five heads fell out. This time, Batu recognized
two of the heads. One belonged to his father-in-law, Hsuang Yu Po,
and another to Xeng, the Hsuang family steward.
"The mighty Yamun Khahan, Ruler of the World and Illustrious
Emperor of All Peoples, sends his greetings." Koja spoke as stiffly
as he sat. "He wishes you to know that he meant no insult by
sending an escort with his messenger. He repays the courtesy you
showed him by returning his guards' heads, and sends to you the
heads of ten Shou commanders who fell defending this insignificant
town."
Batu barely paid the little man any attention. The general was
staring at Tzu Hsuang. Though he had long ago accepted that his
father-in-law had died in Shou Kuan, he could not help being
shocked by the sight of the noble's gray-haired head.
A dozen contradictory emotions clouded the general's thoughts. He
felt grief at the loss of a friend, and anger at the sight of a
family member's mutilation. His thoughts turned to Wu and what he
would to her say about her father's death. Would he reveal what he
had seen? Perhaps it would be better to lie and say that Hsuang's
body had never been recovered.
Koja's voice suddenly stopped droning. Batu realized that he had
allowed his enemy to see his pain.
"Is something wrong, General?" Koja asked. The lama's face did not
bear the smirk Batu had expected to see there. Instead, it showed a
faint trace of surprise.
Batu shook his head, chastising himself for allowing familial
feelings to interfere with his duty. "Nothing's wrong," he snapped,
more harshly than he meant to. "Is this all your master sent you to
deliver?"
"No," the lama responded. His horse moved forward to tug at a woody
root. Koja jerked on the reins, then said, "These are the words of
Yamun Khahan." He unconsciously straightened his back and sat high
in his saddle. " 'I have killed a million of your people and laid
waste to a million acres of your land.' " The lama's hand swept the
horizon.
" 'I have smashed six of your armies and killed two hundred
thousand of your soldiers.'" The little messenger thumped his chest
dramatically, as if he were actually the one who had done all these
things." 'I have captured two of your cities and plundered all that
lies within their walls.'"
Koja paused, allowing ample opportunity for his audience to
consider the words. Batu remained unimpressed.
The lama continued," 'This I have done not out of greed, only to
repay your treacherous attempt on my life. Now, I have learned that
your emperor did not know of the attack on me. Two servants sent an
assassin to my camp without his knowledge. Therefore, Shou Lung's
punishment is complete. I will call an end to this war, keeping
only the lands I have conquered.'"
Batu stared at Koja for several minutes, shocked by what the lama
claimed. Though the general had no doubt that Shou Lung employed
assassins as diplomatic instruments, he could not believe an
imperial servant would take such a drastic step without the Divine
One's knowledge.
Finally, seeing that Koja was again scrutinizing him, the general
looked toward Shou Kuan and said, "Even if I believed this lie, it
would not be worth a single foot of Shou territory." Batu pointed
at Koja's starving horse. "Within two weeks, your horses will not
be fit to ride. Tell Yamun Khahan that if I were him, I would
attack soon."
The lama frowned, clearly puzzled. "You will not consider the
khahan's offer?"
"There is nothing to consider," Batu replied. He turned his horse
away, indicating the parlay was over.
The lama did not leave. "Please! The khahan is not lying about your
assassin. You must agree or thousands of men will die
needlessly."
Batu looked at Koja out of the corner of his eye. "If the khahan
wishes his men to live, they may surrender and the emperor will
take them as slaves."
Koja sighed, exasperated. "The Tuigan are not the only ones who
will die."
"That does not matter," the Shou general replied coldly, regarding
the priest with an icy stare. "My men are ready to die whenever I
command it." Batu motioned to the guards. "Send him back to his
master."
A soldier took Koja's reins. After the guard had led the messenger
away, Pe and Batu's subordinate generals rode to his side. "What
did he want?" asked the adjutant.
"There isn't time to repeat it," Batu replied. "We must erect our
wall tonight. The barbarians will attack tomorrow. Go and tell the
loggers to bring their poles forward, then meet me at my
tent."
"As you order," Pe replied.
Batu quickly assigned supervisory duties to his subordinate
generals, then rode to the kilns and asked for a report. The result
was disappointing. There were only enough bricks to build a wall
two feet high. Nevertheless, a two-foot barrier was better than
none at all. If the wall was built on the far edge of the ditch,
the men standing in the trench would have nearly four feet of
cover. Batu ordered the officer in charge to prepare the bricks for
transport.
After leaving the kilns, Batu turned toward his tent. By the time
the general arrived, dusk was falling. He paused and looked down
toward Shou Kuan. Already, thousands of torches were burning in the
Shou trench.
The general went inside the pavilion and found Pe waiting. While
Batu's soldiers labored at the wall, the general from Chukei
reviewed each unit's condition, formulated his battle plan, and
issued written orders. Even with his wall, Batu was far from
certain of victory. He was determined that his chances would not be
fouled this time by a lack of communication or a misunderstood
order.
By the time dawn came, Batu and Pe had finished their plans. Though
the adjutant could not keep from yawning, the general was far from
tired. Anticipation of the coming battle invigorated him. He
fastened his scabbard onto his belt, then led the way out of the
tent.
"Dispatch the orders, Pe," the general said. "I'm going down to
inspect our wall." He mounted his horse and rode down the
hill.
As he had hoped, the wall had been completed in a single evening.
The men had not had time to mortar the bricks into place, but the
wall would stop arrows all the same. The sharpened poles had been
placed at a forty-five-degree angle in front of the wall. They were
spaced every two feet, close enough to impale any horse charging
between them.
The commander of Hai Yuan's army rode close to Batu.
"The men did well, did they not?"
"Yes," Batu answered. "They are to be commended."
"Let us hope our soldiers fight as well as they build," the general
said, nodding toward the city walls.
As Batu had expected, thousands of barbarians stood along the top
of Shou Kuan's fortifications. They were dressed in their armor and
carried their bows in plain sight. The remainder of the barbarians,
Batu suspected, sat astride their horses in the streets behind the
gate. When the gates opened, they would charge out in a long,
seemingly endless column and the battle would begin.
Batu turned to a messenger. "Have the officers prepare their men
for battle. We won't have to wait much longer."
The Tuigan, however, did not attack right away. An hour passed,
then two. The barbarians remained on the wall, ready for battle,
but the gates did not open.
The sun crept higher in the sky and the day grew warmer. Exhausted
from the long night of labor, pengs began to nap behind the wall.
Officers walked the line, yelling at their men and beating them to
keep them awake. Even Batu, still expecting the barbarians to
charge out at any moment, yawned and struggled to keep his eyes
from closing.
Morning turned to afternoon, and afternoon to evening. Still, the
Tuigan did not attack. Finally, as the dim purples of twilight
began to creep across the rolling hills, the gate opened.
Instead of a mass of charging cavalry, however, all that issued
from the city was the lama, Koja. He carried the same flag of truce
he had carried yesterday. Batu was surprised the Tuigan leader had
sent the messenger out again, but he was also curious as to what
the khahan had to say now that the wall had been built. The general
dispatched a dozen guards to escort the lama through the
fortifications.
With Pe and his subcommanders following close behind, Batu met Koja
as soon as he crossed the trench line. As the lama approached
within speaking distance, he said, "I bring words of praise from
Yamun Khahan. He says that the Shou build walls faster than any of
the peoples he has fought."
"I did not build the wall to impress the khahan," Batu snapped. "I
built it to keep him caged."
Koja ignored the terse response. "The khahan wishes you to know
that he and his men eat well enough on the milk of their mares and
the blood of their stallions. He says that when the horses grow too
weak to fight, they will be slaughtered and used to feed his
men."
The lama paused, looking to the generals of Hai Yuan and Wak'an in
search of the apprehension he could not read on Batu's face. He did
not find it. Both men were shrewd enough not to reveal their
feelings to the enemy.
Koja continued, "The khahan says he will test the strength of your
wall at his leisure. Perhaps he will attack tonight, while your men
lie sound asleep, recovering from their many hours of labor.
Perhaps he will attack many months from now, when the cold autumn
rains come and your men grow ill from sleeping in the mud. Perhaps
he will wait until the winter snows, when your men huddle with
frozen hands and feet around burning dung, while his men eat and
drink in the comfort of the city's warm houses."
"Tell the khahan that Shou can build houses as well as walls," Batu
countered, resting his hand on the hilt of his sword. "The flesh of
his horses will rot before we freeze. Tell him that whenever he
wishes to fight, we will be ready."
Koja nodded, as if he had expected no other response. "Perhaps
fighting will not be necessary," he said, reaching into his
robes.
Pe, Hai Yuan, and Wak'an drew their swords and urged their mounts
forward to shield Batu. "Please!" Koja said, slowly withdrawing an
ebony tube. "There is nothing but paper inside. Let me show
you."
The three men looked to their commander for instruction. Batu
nodded his permission. To the lama, he said, "Open it."
Koja slowly opened the tube and withdrew two sheets of paper. "Read
these," he said, handing them to Pe. "They prove that the khahan is
telling the truth about the assassin."
Pe backed his horse several steps and handed the papers to Batu. In
the fading light, it was difficult to make out the writing, so it
took a few moments to read the first letter. It was addressed to
Yamun Khahan and was from a spy in the summer palace. It reported
Batu's appointment as General of the Northern Marches and his
subsequent disappearance. The letter also named Kwan Chan Sen and
Ju-Hai Chou as the two men who had sent the assassin after the
khahan.
The general passed the letter to his subcommanders, then looked at
the second paper. He immediately recognized Qwo's calligraphy. His
heart pounded wildly. Forcing himself to remain composed, he read
Wu's account of recovering the first letter and her identification
of Ting Mei Wan as the spy who had written it. At the end of the
account, Batu noted his wife's signature and the stain of dried
blood next to it.
When he looked up, the general asked, "Where did you get these
letters?"
"From a dead man," Koja replied simply. "As you can see, the khahan
is telling the truth about the assassin."
"Perhaps, and perhaps not," scoffed the general from Wak'an. "This
document could easily be a forgery."
"It isn't," Batu replied, passing the second sheet of paper to him.
"I recognize the calligraphy."
Wak'an read the letter quickly, his face blanching with
shock.
While his subordinates read the letter, Batu fought to conceal the
distress it had caused him. His stomach ached with concern for his
wife and children. He wanted nothing more than to take his horse
and ride to Tai Tung to see what had happened to his family. Batu
tried to put such thoughts out of his mind, for he was a soldier
and knew better than to allow his feelings to interfere with his
duty. Forcing himself to ignore the worry in his heart, Batu looked
back to Koja.
"This is all very interesting, but it changes nothing," the general
said, tightening his face to keep from showing his emotions. "Even
if I had the right, I would not yield a single foot of Shou
territory to your master."
Koja nodded in understanding. "That will not be necessary. In his
infinite generosity and wisdom, the khahan will accept a different
form of tribute. He will allow Shou Lung to retain the lands he has
conquered, but you must give him the men who sent the
assassin."
Batu studied the lama's face, considering Yamun Khahan's offer. The
terms were not unreasonable: two lives in return for peace. Even if
it meant sacrificing his friend Ju-Hai Chou, Batu could see the
wisdom of accommodating the barbarian commander. Despite the
attitude the general displayed whenever he met Koja, he was far
from certain that the Shou could outlast the barbarians. With
autumn coming and the surrounding land laid to waste, it would
prove difficult to keep the army fed. Of course, he could bring
supplies from other cities, but that would require the use of
massive supply columns vulnerable to the muddy fall weather. In the
end, it might be his own troops who starved to death, not Yamun
Khahan's.
By not accepting the offer, he knew, he was risking his command. If
the Tuigan sensed any weakness in his army, they would sally forth
and wipe it out. In itself, such a risk did not trouble Batu, for
soldiers had to be accustomed to danger and imminent death.
However, if his army fell before the emperor could muster
reinforcements, nothing would stand between the barbarians and Tai
Tung. Shou Lung itself might fall, and that was a risk he did not
dare take.
Koja shifted in his saddle. "There is no need to make your decision
immediately," he said. "The khahan is prepared to receive your
response in the morning."
"That won't be necessary," Batu replied, locking eyes with lama.
"If the emperor will give me charge of Kwan Chan Sen and Ju-Hai
Chou, I agree to the terms."
Koja breathed a loud sigh of relief. "The mighty khahan will be
most pleased. There is only one other term: you will accompany
myself and five thousand riders to retrieve the
criminals."
"You're mad!" the commander from Wak'an exclaimed. "We'd be fools
to let five thousand barbarians within a hundred miles of the
emperor!"
"You must," Koja answered, meeting the general's gaze with a
surprisingly stubborn frown. "We are not surrendering. Therefore, I
am entitled to my bodyguard."
"You are entitled to nothing!" someone else snapped.
Batu silenced his subordinates with an angry scowl, then he
addressed Koja. "You may have your bodyguard," he said. "But we
aren't surrendering either, so I will also take five thousand
men."
Even without looking at them, Batu knew his subcommanders did not
agree with his decision. Nevertheless, he felt sure it was the
correct one. Five thousand Tuigan did not concern him, so long as
he had five thousand Shou to watch them. Besides, if the emperor
rejected the peace proposal, he would make sure that Koja's
bodyguard never returned to defend the walls of Shou
Kuan.
The lama studied Batu for a moment, as if trying to read the
thoughts of the Shou commander. Finally, the little historian said,
"I am sure the khahan will agree to your request. When shall we
leave?"
"At dawn," Batu replied.
Considering the exhausted condition of his men, one night was not
much rest before beginning such a long ride. Nevertheless, now that
he had decided to return to the summer palace, Batu was unwilling
to postpone their departure for even an hour. Thoughts of Wu, Ji,
and Yo were flashing through his mind so rapidly that he was
burning up with anxiety for them.
With more than a little fear, the General of the Northern Marches
wondered how much his concern for his family had influenced his
decision. For if his emotions had played any part in his decision
to accept the khahan's proposal, he was betraying his duty.