
"You're a lunatic," he pronounced. "A gibbering idiot."
Smiling crookedly, Belisarius turned to the man on his left. "Is that your opinion also, Vasudeva?"
The commander of Belisarius' contingent of Kushan troops shrugged. "Difficult to say," he replied, in his
thick, newly learned Greek. For a moment, Vasudeva's usually impassive face was twisted by a grimace.
"Impossible to make fair judgement," he growled. "This helmet—" A sudden fluency came upon him:
"Ignorant stupid barbarian piece of shit helmet designed by ignorant stupid barbarians with shit for
brains!"
A deep breath, then: "Stupid fucking barbarian helmet obscures all vision. Makes me blind as a bat." He
squinted up at the sky. "It is daylight, yes?"
Belisarius' smile grew more crooked still. The Kushans had not stopped complaining about their helmets
since they were first handed the things. Weeks ago, now. As soon as his army was three days' march
from Peroz-Shapur, and Belisarius was satisfied there were no eyes to see, he had unloaded the
Kushans' new uniforms and insisted they start wearing them.
The Kushans had howled for hours. Then, finally yielding to their master's stern commands—they were,
after all, technically his slaves—they had stubbornly kept his army from resuming its march for another
day. A full day, while they furiously cleaned and recleaned their new outfits. Insisting, all the while, that
invented-by-a-philosopher-and-manufactured-by-a-poet-civilized-fucking caustics were no match for
hordes of rampaging-murdering-raping-plundering-barbarian-fucking lice.
Glancing down at Vasudeva's gear, Belisarius privately admitted his sympathy.
He had obtained the Kushans' new armor and uniforms, through intermediaries, from the Ostrogoths.
Ironically, although the workmanship—certainly the filth—of the outfits was barbarian, they were
patterned on Roman uniforms of the previous century. As armor went, the outfits were quite substantial.
They were sturdier, actually, than modern cataphract gear, in the way they combined a mail tunic with
laminated arm and leg protection. That weight, of course, was the source of some of the grumbling. The
Kushans favored lighter armor than Roman cataphracts to begin with—much less this great, gross,
grotesque Ostrogoth gear.
But it was the helmets for which the Kushans reserved their chief complaint. They were accustomed to
their own light and simple headgear, which consisted of nothing much more than a steel plate across the
forehead held by a leather strap. Whereas these—these—these great, heavy, head-enclosing,
silly-horse-tail-crested, idiot-segmented-steel-plate fucking barbarian fucking monstrosities—
They obscured their topknots! Covered them up completely!
"Which," Belisarius had patiently explained at the time, "is the point of the whole exercise. No one will
realize you are Kushans. I must keep your existence in my army a secret from the enemy."
The Kushans had understood the military logic of the matter. Still—
Belisarius felt Vasudeva's glare, but he ignored it serenely. "Oh, surely you have some opinion," he
stated.
Vasudeva transferred the glare onto the countryside below. "Maurice is correct," he pronounced. "You
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