He reached up and undid a piece of string from around his neck. It was looped through a hole in a tarnished coin.
"Corporal Scallot!" he said.
"Yes, sarge!" said Scallot, saluting.
"You will note I am divestering myself of my insignia and am handing you my official shilling, which means, since last time I signed up it was for twelve years and that was sixteen years ago, I am now fully and legally a damn civilian!"
"Yes, Mister Jackrum," said Scallot cheerfully. Among the prisoners, heads jerked up at the sound of the name.
"And that being the case, and since you, captain, are invading our country by night under the cover of darkness, and I am a humble civilian, I think there's no rule to stop me beating seven kinds of crap out of you until you tell me why you came here and when the rest of your mates are going to arrive. And that may take me some time, sir, because up until now I've only ever discovered five types of crap." He rolled up his sleeves, hauled up the captain again and drew back a fist -
"We just had to take the recruits into custody," said a voice. "We weren't going to hurt them! Now put him down, Jackrum, damn you! He's still seeing stars!"
It was the sergeant from the inn. Polly looked at the other prisoners. Even with Carborundum and Maladict watching them, and Tonker glowering at them, there was a definite sense that the first blow landed on the captain was going to start a riot. And Polly thought: they are very protective, aren't they...
Jackrum must have picked it up, too. "Ah, now we're talking," he said, lowering the captain gently but still holding his coat. "Your men speak up for you well, captain."
"That's because we're not slaves, you bloody beeteater," growled one of the troopers.
"Slaves? All my lads joined up of their own free will, turniphead."
"Maybe they thought they did," said the sergeant. "You just lied to 'em. Lied to 'em for years. They're all gonna die because of your stupid lies! Lies and your raddled, rotting, lying old whore of a duchess!"
"Private Goom, as you were! That is an order! As you were, I said! Private Maladict, take that sword off'f Private Goom! That is another order! Sergeant, order your men to ease back slowly! Slowly! Do it now! Upon my oath I am not a violent man, but any man, any man who disobeys me, bigod, that man is lookin' at a broken rib!"
Jackrum screamed all that in one long explosion of sound without taking his eyes off the captain.
Reaction, order and breathless stillness had taken just a few seconds. Polly stared at the sudden tableau as her muscles untensed.
The Zlobenian troopers were settling back. Carborundum's raised club began to lower itself gently. Little Wazzer was held off the ground by Maladict, who'd wrenched a sword from her hand; possibly only a vampire could have moved faster than Wazzer as she'd charged the prisoners.
"Custody," said Jackrum, in a quiet voice. "That's a funny word. Look at my little lads, will you? Not a whisker between them yet, save for the troll, and lichen don't count. Still wet behind the ears, they are. What's dangerous about a harmless bunch of farm boys that'd concern a fine bunch of horse-wallopers like yourselves?"
"Can thomeone pleathe come and put their finger on thith knot?" said Igor, from his makeshift operating table. "I've jutht about done."
"Harmless?" said the sergeant, staring at the struggling Wazzer. "They're a bunch of bloody madmen!"
"I want to speak to your officer, damn you," said the captain, who looked a little less unfocused now. "You do have an officer, don't you?"
"Yeah, we've got one somewhere, as I recall," said Jackrum. "Perks, go and fetch the rupert, will you? Best if you take that dress off first, too. You never know, with ruperts." He carefully lowered the captain onto a bench, and straightened up.
"Carborundum, Maladict, chop something off any prisoner who moves, and any man who tries to attack a prisoner!" he said. "Now then... oh, yes. Threeparts Scallot, I wish to enlist in your wonderful army, with its many opportunities for a young man willing to apply himself."
"Any previous soldierin'?" said Scallot, grinning.
"Forty years fighting every bleeder within a hundred miles of Borogravia, corporal."
"Special skills?"
"Stayin' alive, corporal, come what may."
"Then allow me to present you with one shilling and immediate acceleration to the rank of sergeant," said Scallot, handing back the coat and the shilling. "Want to Osculate the Doxie?"
"Not at my time o' life," said Jackrum, putting on his jacket again. "There," he said. "All smart, all neat, all legal. Go on, Perks, I gave you an order."
Blouse was snoring. His candle had burned down. A book was open on his blanket. Polly gently pulled it out from under his fingers. The title, almost invisible on the stained cover, was: Tacticus: The Campaigns.
"Sir?" she whispered.