The Raike Box Set

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The Raike Box Set Page 117

by Jackson Lear


  We had two ways of reaching a boat: by storming the fortress or plunging ourselves into the freezing water, water that Torunn assured me was significantly colder than the lake thanks to the glaciers feeding Ice Bridge’s renowned river. Oh, and there were spikes in the water. Where? No idea. Wonderful.

  A sentry strolled along the fortress walkway, his bow no where in sight. I imagine he’d been on edge for the last five days like us, dealing with our escape, his king being overthrown, the vaults raided, and now a new monarch residing on the throne.

  I turned to Berik. “Did you go through there?”

  “No, we avoided this place completely. We went ten miles up the river, crossed it, and started up the mountain over there.”

  “Dalo?”

  “Sir?”

  “How’s the leg?”

  “I can hobble.”

  “You scored one ninety five last year in an archery competition in front of the governor and thousands of spectators.”

  “Yes sir.”

  “Do you see that guy walking along the wall?”

  “I need to be a lot closer than this to hit him.”

  “How far?”

  “Ideally? Within two hundred yards.”

  Leaving us with about six hundred yards to hobble. Jarmella added: “Someone will have to help him walk.”

  “Gaynun? Menrihk? What have you got?”

  Both were pointing a magical rod at the gate house. “I see one other,” said Gaynun.

  “And someone’s talking to someone else. It’s muffled, like behind a door. I can’t make out what they’re saying from here.”

  I asked Jarmella: “If that was an imperial fort, how many people would be on guard duty?”

  “A fort is different to a permanent wall surrounding a city. A fort would be made up of nearly all soldiers so there would be a lot more on duty or ready within a minute if there was a situation. This place is more likely to have a skeleton crew. The defenses lie in the building, not in the number of guards. A wall of that size would have four or five on duty, maybe the same down below taking it easy and swapping out every couple of hours.”

  Torunn leaned forward. “Ice Bridge has built more defenses over the last couple of years. Defenses against vampires.”

  “Even though it’s controlled by vampires?”

  Torunn shrugged. “If it defends against vampires it will defend against humans.”

  “They now have a cavalry,” said Jarmella. “Which means their enemies might one day have a cavalry as well. Better to prepare for that now than suffer later on.”

  I asked: “Did they bring in a lot of mages? Blacksmiths? Carpenters?”

  Yahnson certainly nodded. Torunn translated. “Every noble gave their best blacksmith and carpenter to Draegor last year. Some went to Ice Bridge.”

  “Did Yahnson go?”

  Torunn shrugged with indifference. “Does Draegor know who the best blacksmith is? No. Yahnson sent … how do you say … young blacksmith.”

  “Apprentice?”

  “Aye.”

  “Did the apprentice come back?”

  “No. He’s still somewhere out there. Maybe in Brilskeep. Maybe Ice Bridge. Maybe somewhere else.”

  “Okay, so we have a wall that’s covered in grime so it’s as slippery as hell. Gaynun? How’s the ground looking surrounding the fort? Freshly dug up?”

  “Looks like gravel.” He searched the rest of the land in front of us. “Yeah, gravel all the way around, all the way from the base to about forty feet out.”

  “So, it’s noisy as hell and probably covered with enchanted lengths of steel to catapult anyone dumb enough to run towards the wall.”

  “Yahnson says gate would have same,” said Torunn. “But moveable.”

  “I do see swivel posts twenty feet from the front of the gate,” said Gaynun.

  “Are the swivel posts locked?” I asked.

  Jarmella rolled her eyes at me.

  “All right, of course they’re locked. And you probably need to be on the other side of the wall to open them.”

  “Do we need to open them?” asked Adalyn. “I mean, if all we need is a ship then there’s – what – fourteen just over there.”

  Jarmella shook her head. “We’d have to swim half a mile through freezing water with no way of getting warm again once we’re on board.”

  I said: “And I’d like to stop as many of those boats from being able to chase us.”

  “So we either get them to open the gate for us or we do it ourselves,” said Jarmella.

  Admittedly, tossing Saskia in there would’ve been quite useful but we were short on vampires and high … okay, not quite high, but higher … ish … on ethics when it came to civilian casualties.

  “We don’t have enough mages to break the gate down,” said Jarmella.

  “Maybe we sneak in with the cavalry,” said Adalyn.

  “Is that before or after Odalis attacks them all and causes a ruckus?”

  “I’m just offering a suggestion …”

  Jarmella nudged me. “Well? This is your area of expertise.”

  “You’ve never even broken into a practice fortress before?”

  “No. We’re army. We siege. Mercenaries are the ones who break into places like that for fun, right? So how do we do it?”

  Ideally, we would’ve waited until nightfall, but the cavalry were on their way so time was an issue. “Six of us will go in pairs spaced fifty yards apart. One able bodied, the other faking a limp, an injury, or whatever the person in front of them is not doing. Odeh and Dalo in the rear – keep your bow hidden. Jarmella and Torunn in the middle …” I cast my eyes over the concerned yet hopeful faces of the vanguard. Someone was going to be my new squeezer. They just didn’t know it yet. One set of mousey eyes seemed more suitable than the rest. “Adalyn, you’re with me.”

  A smile spread from ear to ear.

  “Keep it in your pants, Ad,” muttered Jarmella.

  “That’s one hundred percent where it is,” beamed Adalyn. She shook the smile away and forced a deep breath. “Wait, I’m in the front?”

  “With me.”

  “Okay. Front line. With Raike. Why me?”

  “You didn’t lose your shit when a vampire came straight at you. In fact, you killed it.”

  Adalyn’s smile returned.

  “Let’s have that rope.”

  “You know there are more vampires in there, right?” said Torunn.

  Adalyn’s smile dropped completely. “Sorry, what?”

  Eight hundred yards away – no sign of them noticing us. Six hundred yards – still nothing. Four hundred yards, now with me limping and one arm draped over Adalyn’s shoulders – the first head glanced our way. Lifted his bow as a precautionary measure.

  “You’ve done this before, haven’t you, sir?”

  “The shit I’ve been involved with in the past would make your head spin.”

  “All right, I’m game. And nervous. More nervous than game, actually. Make my head spin.”

  “We have four minutes before everything starts to go horribly wrong. Now might be a good time to prepare yourself.”

  “… Why did you say things are about to go horribly wrong?”

  “Plans on the fly usually do.” The bowman moved closer to the gate, keeping us in sight at all times.

  “I don’t mean to be rude but from what I’ve seen of you your plans are pretty much made only on the fly …”

  “You’re going to want to change the topic, Adalyn.”

  “Okay, er … you probably don’t know but that thing when I offered to buy you a drink?”

  “Thank you, I was flattered.”

  “You were supposed to ask me why and then I’d tell you and then you were going to offer to buy me a drink instead.”

  “I was?”

  “That was the plan. Only you didn’t ask why.”

  “All right. Why?”

  “See, well it was better back there before … oh shit, there’s a
second one.” Sure enough, another bowman poked his head up.

  “Keep it together, Adalyn.”

  “Okay. It’s my birthday.” She gave me a full-tooth apologetic grin.

  I managed to keep a burst of internal swearing at bay but it wasn’t easy considering that we were quickly approaching an enemy fortress and whose watchmen had already seen us. “Congratulations.”

  “Thank you.”

  “I don’t want to be presumptive but since Jarmella’s the oldest at twenty …”

  “Jarmella’s not the oldest.”

  “I thought that’s why she had seniority.”

  “Well, I mean … that’s one of them … officially … but er … can you keep a secret?”

  “Sure.”

  “She’s seventeen.”

  “She’s what?”

  “Almost eighteen, but yeah. She promised me not to tell anyone but since I’m about to die on my own birthday I thought it was only fair.”

  That internal swearing? Now much worse. “You’re sure?”

  “About her? Oh yes. We started basic training at the same time. She was a mess. Her parents dumped her into the army and lied about her age. I think her mom told her she was going to stay there until she got her shit sorted out or stopped misbehaving or words to that effect. Now, some fifteen year olds do look younger than they actually are but even though she was as tall as me at the time there was no question that she was twelve. Her parents just kept reassuring the recruitment sergeant that she was a lying brat and old enough to serve. Poor thing clung to me straight away and bawled her eyes out for a week. So yeah. Officially she’s twenty but she’s actually one of the youngest in the whole vanguard. You promise you won’t tell anyone?”

  My first instinct was to add it to the list of blackmailable trivia I knew about members of the Imperial Army … and then I remembered that I was no longer a mercenary who made a living from blackmail. “Your secrets are safe with me.”

  “Cool.”

  Another head popped up. Climbed up onto the wall itself and held onto one of the taller posts, leaning out like she was on the mast of a ship. A creature who had no problem dealing with injuries that humans found life-threatening. Adalyn’s breathing spiked.

  “All right, quick story to make your head spin,” I said. “One day we were hired by this old lady – hair growing in tufts out of her ears and nose, skin so wrinkly she might’ve been made of bark. Her brother had just died and was set to have a funeral. She wanted us to be bodyguards for the whole affair because the family had something like five brothers still alive, four sisters, sixty kids between them, and four hundred grandkids. She was convinced that one of them killed her parents. She was also convinced that her own daughter had been swapped for a stranger’s kid when she was an infant by an angry sister because of some petty revenge, only she could never prove it. One great uncle was caught in bed with two different servers on the same day. One wife stormed in naked declaring: ‘There! Are you happy?’ Someone threw paint all over her and shouted: ‘I am now!’ No matter how little we engaged with them they were all desperate to come up to us and reveal every dirty secret they had on everyone else. This lady blackmailed that lady. This guy and that guy used to beat the snot out of each other whenever they could. This wife and that husband were having an affair – swapped spouses – and then had affairs with their former husband and wife. Siblings had bankrupted each other, some had been forced into arranged marriages with foreign servants as a giant fuck you so that they could never be seen in public without suffering a world of shame. We couldn’t believe it. Worse than that: it turned every last one of us in the company into the biggest bag of gossips we had ever met because each story was better than the last. The best bit was right at the end when it came time to bury the dead brother. No one could find him. During all of the commotion someone actually stole his body and ran off with it. We tracked him down to a hospital. He was being used as practice for medical students. When we left we found twenty of the family members in the hospital corridor, all with bruises, broken limbs, broken noses, some throwing up on the floor. One of them was still challenging another to a fight. Apparently his thing was that he would fight naked. Just strip right down while goading the other person into a rumble. Confuses the hell out of people. He did it right in front of us and I can tell you exactly why it worked for him.”

  “Why?”

  “Because he had two dicks.”

  Adalyn glanced up at me. “You what?”

  “Yeah. You see that vampire up there on the right? You’re going to have to kill her now.” We were one hundred yards out. I flashed a signal behind me, hoping that Jarmella would pass it on to Dalo.

  “Er …”

  “Yank her off the wall. Do it now.”

  Adalyn’s breathing shook. “I …”

  “You’re the only one who can do it and you’re going to have to act before she realizes why you’ve suddenly become very nervous.”

  The vampire shifted her head to one side, breathing us in as a moment of caution rippled through her chest and shoulders.

  Adalyn shot her hand out and wrenched the vampire by the head from ninety yards away. The vampire scrambled, landed smack onto the gravel ten yards from the wall and sprung into the air again – the defensive enchantments catapulting her forward. I raced in. She squirmed to right herself, hitting the next line of enchantments. Her legs launched up first, the rest of her body flopping over from the imbalance and then flew another twenty yards towards me. Landed.

  Dalo’s arrow sailed past me, slamming into the vampire’s shoulder. The creature hissed, disorientated from three strikes into the ground and looked up just in time.

  I sliced through her head just as she pulled back, the extra length on my sword cleaving four inches through her forehead. She stared back – dazed from the attack – tried to grab me with one hand but her vision was off and the arrow impeded her full movement. I swung back, lopping off her fingers and lunged forward. A jet of blood flew to the side. Her head and body no longer connected.

  Dalo’s next arrow found its mark on the first bowman. Right through the ear and into his skull. He stumbled back, losing balance. Dropped.

  Jarmella hurried next to me. “Is everyone okay?”

  “Fine. There was a third person.”

  “I got him. I don’t think he’s dead, but …”

  We all stared at the closed gate forty yards away. Somewhere in that vicinity were the keys to unlocking the swivel posts that would get us and the rest of the vanguard inside.

  Jarmella looked to me. “Now what?”

  I drew in a deep breath, seriously considered going through the frigid water before dismissing it completely. “Adalyn? You’re up.”

  “Okay. What am I doing?”

  “You’re going to run towards the gate. When its defenses launch you into the air Jarmella will push you forward. Before you hit the ground Odeh will push you up again, getting you onto that wall.” I was met with a round of bewildered silence. I handed her the looped length of rope. Tied it around her chest. “You need to hook this onto one of those spikes before you fall. I suggest you drink a lot of vampire blood before you make the leap.”

  “But it’s …”

  “I know. Congratulations.”

  “Why me?”

  “Because you’re the lightest. Blood. Drink it. You have ten seconds to reach that wall.”

  She gulped, started shaking immediately, and with panic absolutely frying her senses and the frenzy of vampire blood taking her over Adalyn drew in a deep breath, bounced up and down for what I could only assume was a prayer for good luck, and bounded forward.

  She shrieked the moment her body was catapulted up, the surprise too much for her. Jarmella staggered back in surprise, having to nearly catch Adalyn before she blasted her forward. Odeh did the same then both mages had to slow Adalyn in the air before she slammed against the wall.

  Adalyn had completely forgotten about using the rope – not h
er fault since squeezers needed a hell of a lot of practice and sizeable balls to do the job Adalyn had just been dumped with. I targeted the looped rope, sapping a lot of energy with the unplanned spell and managed to propel it up and over one of the wooden spikes lining the wall. Adalyn landed, bouncing off the wall and froze, her grip shaky but the rest of her unmoving.

  “Is she dead?” murmured Odeh.

  The birthday girl swung one uneven arm up, then another, hauling herself an inch at a time until she reached the top of the wall, rolled to a stop, and flopped one hand onto her stomach while she caught her breath.

  “She needs to move quicker,” said Jarmella.

  Adalyn huffed, rolled onto her side, and managed to sit up.

  “Much quicker than that …”

  She drew her sword, slipped between the spikes, and dropped out of sight.

  Torunn stared behind us. “Korla.”

  The first of Draegor’s rider appeared, not at a gallop but at a gentle canter. Calm now that Ice Bridge was in sight. That was going to screw any chance the ambush team had of tripping them up. Somewhere in that mess was Lieutenant Loken and a few prisoners from Faersrock. Hopefully Odalis was quick on his feet and would get them moving fast enough to injure them. And hopefully Adalyn would get this stupid gate open in time.

  Jarmella turned her back against the cavalry and stared at the locked gate in front of us. “Shiiiiiit, shit, shit, shit, shit.”

  “We’ll be fine. They’ve been riding for five days straight.”

  “And we haven’t done something similar?”

  Odeh piped in. “We can always swim for it.”

  I checked the wrap around my injured wrist. It still hurt when I moved it too much but with all of the vampire blood I’d consumed over the last few days I was sure that it was closer to fully healed than not. Then again, it was still broken.

 

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