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    Sword Brother
   ( War God - 4 )
   David Weber
   A brand new 50,000 word novella, Sword Brother.From the 20007 year edition of "Oath of Swords"
   David Weber
   Sword Brother
   Foreword
   When Toni Weisskopf told me Baen Books was going to reissue Oath of Swords in a trade paperback format, I thought that was a good idea. When she told me she wanted me to write a foreword for it, I thought that was a good idea. When she told me she wanted me to write a foreword for it and give her a new short story set in Bahzell's universe, I thought that was a good idea, too. Of course, that was before I discovered just what my writing schedule was going to look like this year. I still think they're all good ideas, but my life's turned out to be just a bit more . . . interesting, in the Chinese sense of the word, than I anticipated it would.
   That happens to me a lot. Ask Sharon, the mother of my children (whom I see from time to time, when I emerge from my writer's garret in search of sustenance).
   But that lay in the blissfully unknown future when Toni first proposed this whole idea to me, so I happily added it to my plate, little guessing just how heaping a helping I had loaded there. And, in a spirit of happy creativity, I asked Toni what she'd like to see in a foreword.
   "Well," she says to me, "I think you should consider keeping it brief."
   "Brief?" says I. "What are you trying to say, Toni?"
   "Well," she says, "your last two or three novels have all run to 300,000 words . . . or more."
   "And your point is?" says I.
   "Never mind, David," she says.
   I'm still trying to figure out exactly what she was getting at.
   On a more serious note, and a somewhat sadder one, the decision to reissue Oath of Swords was actually made by Jim Baen before his death. I started to say before his "untimely" death, but that, of course, would have been redundant. There really wasn't a time when we could have lost Jim which wouldn't have been "untimely." I miss him, as a professional colleague, as a mentor, as my publisher, and as my friend.
   I also take particular, if bittersweet, pleasure, for several reasons, in knowing that it was Jim's idea to reissue this book. First, because it was his idea, and it was the last book of mine that he'll ever schedule. Second, because Jim was suggesting the reissue of a David Weber fantasy novel, when he could have been inserting another science-fiction novel into the schedule. And third, because I've always had a deep respect for Jim's instincts when it came to scheduling and positioning books.
   When Toni and I first discussed this, neither of us had any idea that we were going to lose Jim. Because of that, we'd both rather looked foreword to twitting Jim (relatively) gently in the foreword, since he was always in something of two minds where my fantasy novels were concerned. He liked them, and their sales were certainly respectable, but he pointed out-correctly-that I'm rather better known for my military science fiction than as a fantasy author. As such, the sales of Bahzell's books have never been as good as, say, the sales figures for Honor Harrington's books. In other words, as he used to tell me, I was taking a cut in pay, as it were, whenever I sat down to write about Bahzell.
   He was right, of course. He tended to be right about things like that with sometimes irritating frequency. And as a publisher-not to say a shameless huckster, which he also was, bless him-he was quite rightly concerned about the bottom line. As a matter of fact, that was one of his jobs as publisher, since some writers (oh, I'm not talking about myself, of course!) experience some difficulty counting above ten with their shoes on. The remarkable thing about it was that even though the sales figures on these books were lower than those on most of my science fiction, Jim still found room on the Baen Books schedule for three of them, with two more still under contract. He knew they were important to me, you see, and that-bottom line or not-made them important to him, as well.
   And why were they important to me? I'm glad you asked that. You did ask, didn't you? Well, someone did, I'm sure.
   The truth is that I've always loved fantasy. In fact, the first novel I ever wrote (which wasn't bought, shocking as that news may be to some people) was a fantasy. As a matter of fact, Bahzell was in that book, too, and if there were any justice in the world -
   But I digress.
   One of the reasons I enjoy both reading and writing fantasy is that the fundamental assumptions that go into building a fantasy world or universe are both different from and similar to the ones that go into building a science fiction world or universe. Or they are for me, at least. The parameters aren't looser so much as more . . . flexible.
   There are certain ingredients that are necessary to make a literary universe that hangs together, that's both convincing and consistent enough that readers actually want to visit. The "technology,"whether it's science-based or magic-based, has to be consistent. The characters have to have a toolbox with both advantages and limitations the writer agrees to abide by, and they have to solve their problems without his suddenly dropping a brand-new tool into the box because he discovers he's painted himself into a corner. The people who live in it have to be believable, and they have to be characters the reader actually cares about. Readers don't have to like the characters (although it does help if they like at least some of them), but they do have to care about what happens to them. The social matrix has to be internally consistent, well thought out, and believable. Whether or not politics are centerstage in the novels set in a universe, the writer has to understand what the political subtext is and abide by it. And the writer has to remember that if he's writing about an entire world, it's probably at least a little bit bigger than Rhode Island. It might even be bigger than Texas. In either case, it's going to have variations of climate, terrain, people, flora, and fauna.
   In a fantasy universe, the "tool box's" rules are less restrictive, but that doesn't absolve the writer of his responsibility to be consistent. The social and political design work still have to be done right, too, and, in some ways, the genre itself has traditionally been rather more limiting. There are expectations, especially in "swords-and-sorcery" fantasy. For example, if you put orcs (or their equivalent) into a fantasy novel, they're probably going to be the bad guys. Elves may be followers of the light or of the dark, but there are certain inherently "elvish" qualities we generally expect to find. Half-elves usually combine the best of both human and elf, and everyone knows the dwarves are greedy, grasping, avaricious sorts who usually end up with the short end of the stick, at least as far as anyone's actually liking or admiring them.
   Please note that I said these are expectations. The best fantasy writers, I think, are those who can take those expectations and lead their readers somewhere else without losing them. Those are the ones I've always most enjoyed reading, at least. Mind you, I'm not talking about Tolkien here. Most of the expectations in modern English-language fantasy derive from his work in one way or another, and in my opinion the reason they do is that he did them so very, very well.
   At any rate, one of the reasons I wanted to write the Bahzell books was to bend some of those expectations myself. For example, the hradani obviously fill the same "ecological niche" as Tolkien's orcs in some ways, but my hero is a hradani. In fact, we spend more time with his people than with anyone else. The gods are very involved, yet they aren't omniscient and they are ultimately dependent on the actions of mortals to accomplish their ends. The half-elves are the nasty, bigoted racists. The elves spend most of their time dreaming and generally avoiding contact with a world which has bruised and abused them once too often. And the dwarves run Norfressa's one true superpower. (Ha! Take that, silly elvish k-nig-it!) And I might as well go ahead and admit right now that I'm still not through bending.
   I'
ve still adopted quite a bit of the mainstream "high fantasy," I suppose. To some extent I think that's inevitable, given the sort of stories I want to tell. But it's the differences, the spaces between the expectations, with which I most enjoy playing.
   Fantasy is also a good place to play with concepts of good and evil, of responsibility and morality. It's a place which is actually designed to let us build heroes and villains who are bigger than life. It can be pure escapism, but there's always a mirror hiding somewhere deep down in the depths, waiting for us to look into it, often when we least expect it.
   And, finally, from my own perspective as a writer, fantasy offers a welcome break from science fiction. I'm a production writer, and I produce somewhere around two million words a year. That's a lot of time in front of the keyboard (well, wearing the voice-activated headset, in my own case), and switching gears helps refresh the sense of wonder and enjoyment that keeps me writing. As any of you who have read my science fiction are undoubtedly aware, I like writing series. I like big story lines, that don't really lend themselves very well to resolution between a single set of covers. And I like to watch characters, events, and societies evolve and grow over several volumes. But maintaining the energy in a series, keeping up the writer's own interest to a level that makes new books enjoyable for his readers, requires occasional breaks. In many respects, the Bahzell novels have represented breaks for me.
   At the same time, they aren't something I write only as a vacation from my "real writing." The very thing that makes them a break for me is the enjoyment I find in working on them and the different constraints and opportunities my fantasy characters face as opposed to my science fiction characters.
   If I can ever find the time for it, I have at least seven more novels I want to set in Bahzell's universe. Two of them will deal with Bahzell, Brandark, and their further adventures. The other five will include all the (surviving) major characters from the first five books, but most of those major characters will be appearing in very important yet ultimately supporting roles as I get around to finally resolving the lingering conflict between the Kontovarans and the Norfressans. The problem, obviously, is finding time to sandwich those books in amongst the science fiction novels which, as Jim pointed out to me, actually pay the rent.
   Now, I have a theory about that. Jim and I discussed it off and on for years. My argument was that if I had more fantasy titles on the shelves, then fantasy readers might actually decide to look for them and even-gasp!-decide to recommend them to their friends. I might even-who knows?-come to be known as a fantasy writer, as well as a science fiction writer, and then the fantasy novels might start generating enough income to make Jim happy to see them. You see the point I'm cunningly making here? If you buy the books, and if you encourage your friends to buy them, then it'll get easier for me to convince Baen Books to let me write even more of them, which will put more of them on the shelves, which will generate more sales, which will . . . Well, I'm sure you get the point, and I hope at least some of you will think this would be a Good Thing.
   I expect Toni will go ahead and let me squeeze them into my writing schedule anyway. She understands how important they are for that gear-switching I mentioned above. Besides, I think she likes them. Of course, she could just be trying to avoid hurting my feelings . . . .
   Nah, not Toni!
   At any rate, here's Oath of Swords, the first of Bahzell Bahnakson's adventures and misadventures. The new novella included with it isn't set at any particular point in Bahzell's life. Those of you who have read the other novels will realize it comes after certain events in them, but aside from that, its exact chronology sort of floats in the timeline of the mainstream of the series. Who knows, maybe it was all a dream. Then again, Tomanâk did warn him about all those alternate universes-
   What? Oh, that was in Wind Rider's Oath, wasn't it? (Shameless plug for later book in series.)
   I hope you like it. I hope you tell Toni you like it, so I can write more of them sooner. Eventually, assuming I'm not struck by a meteorite or something equally drastic, I will get them all written, I'm sure. But I'm not going to complain if you choose to bombard Baen Books' offices with requests for more of them in the meantime.
   Honest.
   David Weber
   I
   He was thinking about snow when it happened.
   He really ought to have been getting his mind totally focused on the task at hand, but the temperature had topped 110° that afternoon, and even now, with the sun well down, it was still in the nineties. That was more than enough to make any man dream about being some place cooler, even if it had been-what? Three years since he'd really seen snow?
   No, he corrected himself with a familiar pang of anguish. Two and a half years . . . since that final skiing trip with Gwynn.
   Gunnery Sergeant Kenneth Houghton's jaw tightened. After so long the pain should have eased, but it hadn't. Or perhaps it had. Right after he'd received word about the accident, it had been so vast, so terrible, it had threatened to suck him under like some black, freezing tide. Now it was only a wound which would never heal.
   The thought ran below the surface of his mind as he stood in the commander's hatch on the right side of the LAV's flat-topped turret and gazed out into the night. As the senior noncom in Lieutenant Alvarez's platoon, Houghton commanded the number two LAV (unofficially known as "Tough Mama" by her crew), with Corporal Jack Mashita as his driver and Corporal Diego Santander as his gunner. Tough Mama was technically an LAV-25, a light armored vehicle based on the Canadian-built MOWAG Piranha, an eight-wheel amphibious vehicle, armored against small arms fire and armed with an M242 25-millimeter Bushmaster chain gun and a coaxial M240 7.62-millimeter machine gun. A second M240 was pintle-mounted at the commander's station, and Tough Mama was capable of speeds of over sixty miles per hour on decent roads. She drank JP-8 diesel fuel, and technically, had an operational range of over four hundred miles in four-wheel drive. In eight-wheel drive, range fell rapidly, and the original LAVs had been infamous for leaky fuel tanks which had reduced nominal range even further. The most recent service life extension program seemed to have finally gotten on top of that problem, at least.
   At the moment, Mashita was sitting behind the wheel, with the big Detroit diesel engine to his immediate right and his head and shoulders sticking up through the hatch above his compartment. The twenty-year old corporal had just finished checking all of the fluid levels-which he'd do again, every time the vehicle stopped. Santander was standing to one side, jaw methodically working on a huge wad of gum, as he spoke quietly with Corporal Levi Johnson, the senior of their evening's passengers. The four-man recon section they were responsible for transporting and supporting had already stowed most of its gear aboard, and Houghton reminded himself to check the tunnel from the LAV's driver's compartment to the troop compartment before they actually headed out. It was supposed to be kept clear at all times, but people had a habit of protecting equipment and gear from damage by stowing it in the tunnel, rather than stowing it in the open-sided bin mounted on the back of the turret or lashing it to the outside of the vehicle, the way they were supposed to.
   Houghton had already completed all of his other pre-mission checks. Fuel, battery, ammo, night-vision, thermal sights, commo, personal weapons . . . He still had a good twenty minutes before they were scheduled to leave, but he and his crew were firm believers in staying well ahead of deadlines.
   Never hurts to be ready sooner than you have to, he reflected, the back of his mind still visualizing the silent, steady sweep of snowflakes. It sure as hell beats the alternative, anyway!And the LT won't like it if something screws up while-
   That was when it happened.
   The universe went abruptly, shockinglygray. Not black, not foggy, not hazy-gray. His brain insisted that the featureless grayness which had enveloped him was almost painfully bright, but his pupils and optic nerve were equally insistent that the light level hadn't changed at all. His hands death-locked on the rim of the commander
's hatch as the fourteen-ton LAV seemed to fall out from under him, yet even as that sickening sense of freefall swept over him, he knew he hadn't actually moved at all.
   After sixteen years in the Corps, Ken Houghton figured he'd seen and experienced just about anything that was likely to come a Marine's way. This was something else entirely, though-something human senses had never been intended to grasp or describe-and a burst of something far too much like panic blazed through him.
   It seemed to go on for hours, but there also seemed to be something wrong with his time sense. He couldn't seem to speak, didn't even seem to be breathing, yet he managed to look down at his wristwatch, and the digital display was crawling, crawling. He could have counted to ten-slowly-in the time it took each broken-backed second to drag itself into eternity. Two agonizingly slow minutes limped past. Then three. Five. Ten. And then, as suddenly as the universe's colors had disappeared, they were back.
   But they were the wrong colors.
   The tans and grays and sun-blasted browns of the Middle East were gone. And so was the night. The LAV sat on a gently sloping hillside covered in prairie grasses three or four feet tall under a sun that was still at least two or three hours short of setting.
   Houghton heard Mashita's deep, explosive grunt of astonishment over the helmet commo link, but the gunnery sergeant hadn't needed that to tell him they weren't in Kansas anymore.
   Houghton stared in stupefied disbelief at the high, crystalline blue sky, felt the autumnal chill in the slight breeze cooling the sweat on his desert-bronzed face, heard the birds that shouldn't have been there, and wondered what the hell had happened. He turned his head slowly, and that was when he saw the tall, white-haired man with the peculiar eyes standing almost directly behind the LAV.
   

 A Call to Vengeance
A Call to Vengeance March Upcountry
March Upcountry The Service of the Sword
The Service of the Sword Worlds of Honor
Worlds of Honor The Sword of the South
The Sword of the South Mission of Honor
Mission of Honor A Call to Arms
A Call to Arms The Captain From Kirkbean
The Captain From Kirkbean March to the Sea
March to the Sea House of Steel: The Honorverse Companion
House of Steel: The Honorverse Companion At the Sign of Triumph
At the Sign of Triumph Like a Mighty Army
Like a Mighty Army Heirs of Empire
Heirs of Empire March to the Stars
March to the Stars Oath of Swords
Oath of Swords On Basilisk Station
On Basilisk Station Oath of Swords and Sword Brother
Oath of Swords and Sword Brother Path of the Fury
Path of the Fury A Mighty Fortress
A Mighty Fortress War of Honor
War of Honor 1633
1633 In Fury Born
In Fury Born Crusade
Crusade Storm From the Shadows
Storm From the Shadows In Fire Forged
In Fire Forged A Beautiful Friendship
A Beautiful Friendship Into the Light
Into the Light Shadow of Freedom
Shadow of Freedom How Firm a Foundation
How Firm a Foundation The Apocalypse Troll
The Apocalypse Troll More Than Honor
More Than Honor Crown of Slaves
Crown of Slaves The Gordian Protocol
The Gordian Protocol The Armageddon Inheritance
The Armageddon Inheritance Out of the Dark
Out of the Dark A Call to Duty
A Call to Duty The Shadow of Saganami
The Shadow of Saganami Wind Rider's Oath
Wind Rider's Oath The Stars at War
The Stars at War Uncompromising Honor - eARC
Uncompromising Honor - eARC Fire Season
Fire Season A Rising Thunder
A Rising Thunder Off Armageddon Reef
Off Armageddon Reef Mutineer's Moon
Mutineer's Moon Hell Hath No Fury
Hell Hath No Fury Worlds of Weber
Worlds of Weber Through Fiery Trials--A Novel in the Safehold Series
Through Fiery Trials--A Novel in the Safehold Series Insurrection
Insurrection By Heresies Distressed
By Heresies Distressed War Maid's Choice
War Maid's Choice At All Costs
At All Costs Shadow of Victory
Shadow of Victory Through Fiery Trials
Through Fiery Trials Ranks of Bronze э-1
Ranks of Bronze э-1 The Insurrection
The Insurrection Safehold 10 Through Fiery Trials
Safehold 10 Through Fiery Trials Old Soldiers
Old Soldiers In Death Ground s-2
In Death Ground s-2 Storm from the Shadows-OOPSIE
Storm from the Shadows-OOPSIE In Enemy Hands hh-7
In Enemy Hands hh-7 Hell's Gate-ARC
Hell's Gate-ARC The Armageddon Inheritance fe-2
The Armageddon Inheritance fe-2 War Maid's choice wg-4
War Maid's choice wg-4 A Call to Vengeance (Manticore Ascendant Book 3)
A Call to Vengeance (Manticore Ascendant Book 3) Heirs of Empire fe-3
Heirs of Empire fe-3 Storm From the Shadows si-2
Storm From the Shadows si-2 Honor Among Enemies hh-6
Honor Among Enemies hh-6 Changer of Worlds woh-3
Changer of Worlds woh-3 Bolo! b-1
Bolo! b-1 Flag In Exile hh-5
Flag In Exile hh-5 Empire from the Ashes
Empire from the Ashes Cauldron of Ghosts
Cauldron of Ghosts Torch of Freedom
Torch of Freedom March To The Sea im-2
March To The Sea im-2 Shadow of Saganami
Shadow of Saganami In Fire Forged: Worlds of Honor V-ARC
In Fire Forged: Worlds of Honor V-ARC Cauldron of Ghosts (eARC)
Cauldron of Ghosts (eARC) Insurrection s-4
Insurrection s-4 The Excalibur Alternative
The Excalibur Alternative Shadow of Freedom-eARC
Shadow of Freedom-eARC The Short Victorious War
The Short Victorious War Manticore Ascendant 1: A Call to Duty (eARC)
Manticore Ascendant 1: A Call to Duty (eARC) Beginnings-eARC
Beginnings-eARC The Service of the Sword woh-4
The Service of the Sword woh-4 The Sword of the South - eARC
The Sword of the South - eARC Treecat Wars sh-3
Treecat Wars sh-3 Worlds of Honor woh-2
Worlds of Honor woh-2 Fire Season sk-2
Fire Season sk-2 March To The Stars im-3
March To The Stars im-3 Echoes Of Honor hh-8
Echoes Of Honor hh-8 A Beautiful Friendship mth-1
A Beautiful Friendship mth-1 The Universe of Honor Harrington mth-4
The Universe of Honor Harrington mth-4 In Fire Forged: Worlds of Honor V
In Fire Forged: Worlds of Honor V Mission of Honor-ARC
Mission of Honor-ARC March Upcountry im-1
March Upcountry im-1 Sword Brother wg-4
Sword Brother wg-4 Manticore Ascendant 3- A Call to Vengeance
Manticore Ascendant 3- A Call to Vengeance We Few
We Few Hell's Gate m-1
Hell's Gate m-1 Throne of Stars
Throne of Stars Empire of Man
Empire of Man The War God's Own wg-2
The War God's Own wg-2 Wind Rider's Oath wg-3
Wind Rider's Oath wg-3 A Rising Thunder-ARC
A Rising Thunder-ARC Torch of Freedom wos-2
Torch of Freedom wos-2 War Of Honor hh-10
War Of Honor hh-10 How Firm a Foundation (Safehold)
How Firm a Foundation (Safehold) On Basilisk Station hh-1
On Basilisk Station hh-1 The Honor of the Qween hh-2
The Honor of the Qween hh-2 War Maid's Choice-ARC
War Maid's Choice-ARC Oath of Swords-ARC
Oath of Swords-ARC Oath of Swords wg-1
Oath of Swords wg-1 A Beautiful Friendship-ARC
A Beautiful Friendship-ARC Sword Brother
Sword Brother Shiva Option s-3
Shiva Option s-3 Sir George And The Dragon
Sir George And The Dragon Ashes Of Victory hh-9
Ashes Of Victory hh-9 A Rising Thunder hh-13
A Rising Thunder hh-13 The Road to Hell - eARC
The Road to Hell - eARC Hell Hath No Fury m-2
Hell Hath No Fury m-2 The Road to Hell (Hell's Gate Book 3)
The Road to Hell (Hell's Gate Book 3) Crusade s-1
Crusade s-1 Field Of Dishonor hh-4
Field Of Dishonor hh-4 The Honor of the Queen
The Honor of the Queen More Than Honor woh-1
More Than Honor woh-1 In Fury Born (ARC)
In Fury Born (ARC) The Warmasters
The Warmasters The Short Victorious War hh-3
The Short Victorious War hh-3 The Shadow of Saganami si-1
The Shadow of Saganami si-1 Empire of Man 01 - March Upcountry
Empire of Man 01 - March Upcountry How firm a foundation s-5
How firm a foundation s-5 Treecat Wars
Treecat Wars