In Every Clime and Place

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In Every Clime and Place Page 26

by Patrick LeClerc


  Nothing.

  I slowed my mad dash and tried to listen. Other than the rasping of my breath and the hammering of my heart, I heard nothing.

  I continued making my way to the village, now at a stumbling walk. My legs were shaking and my chest heaved, pulling frigid air into my raw lungs. My musket was heavy in my left hand and the war club in my right, but not heavy enough that I thought of dropping either.

  I’d snatched up the dead man’s club for several reasons. First, if they caught me, I wanted something to fight with. My tomahawk was stuck in a Frenchman and my gun was empty. The other reason was that I wanted some proof that I’d seen the enemy. John Campbell would probably support me, but Goody Poore might not, and if the local militia captain was some portly political appointee, he might think the raid just a bid for attention by a penniless vagabond with a taste for strong drink.

  I’d built a distinguished career as a penniless vagabond, and I freely admit to a liking for the view of the world through the bottom of a glass, but I don’t like being spoken down to by portly political appointees.

  It wasn’t long before I staggered into Londonderry. It bore little resemblance to the city in Ireland for which it was named. Just a collection of timber houses and farms near the river, but it had a strong blockhouse and I saw armed militiamen walking the street. I breathed a sigh of relief and stumbled to the blockhouse.

  I told the sergeant on duty that I had news for the commander. I was led to a table where a young officer sat.

  The sight of the man was reassuring. He was young, tall and broad shouldered and had the weathered face of a life spent outdoors. It was a face I’d seen often enough on both sides of the battle line back over the ocean. Strong-jawed Scots-Irish, more accustomed to smiling at cruel irony than at frivolity. He wore a practical hunting jacket, not a long uniform coat, and he had a tomahawk at his belt instead of a sword.

  Exactly the kind of officer we wanted on a day like this.

  “I’m Lieutenant Stark, Mr Roberts,” he said. “I’m told you’ve seen this warband.”

  “Yes sir. Two dozen Indians and a half dozen French rangers. They were led by a French officer.” I handed over the club. “Took this off one of them.”

  “You attacked a band of thirty warriors?”

  “Not for all the tea in China, sir. I just let ’em pass by and ambushed the rear of the column.”

  The shadow of a grin played across his lips at that. “But why strike at all?”

  “Wasn’t sure John Campbell and his family had enough of a start,” I replied. “Figured I’d delay them a bit. I got the officer and one Indian.”

  “Then you got away,” he said.

  “Seemed like enough work for one day.”

  “Well done.” He was studying the war club. “Abenaki,” he said. “Out of St Francis.”

  “Probably,” I agreed.

  “No doubt in my mind,” he said. “I’ve been there. Spent a winter with the Abenaki. They took me captive and made me run the gauntlet. But then they did adopt me into the tribe.”

  “It was him or me, Lieutenant.”

  “Don’t worry, Roberts. We do what we have to do.” He clapped me on the shoulder. “You probably saved the village. With the militia called up and the livestock and noncombatants sheltered, we can hold off thirty warriors. If they’d hit us unawares, half the town would be in flames by the time we could react. Get some breakfast. We’ll find some work for you if they do attack.”

  I found a seat at a table and thought about the men I’d killed. The French officer, who had traveled far across the ocean from his homeland to serve his king, only to die, not wreathed in glory on a battlefield, which he might have been prepared for, but ambushed in a remote wilderness while on a scalp-hunting raid. And the Indian, caught up in the middle of a war between two European empires, either of which would call him a savage and destroy his way of life once they’d won and didn’t need any more savages to do their murdering for them.

  I’d marched beside a lot of men just like them. Shared campfires and bad food and drink and exaggerated stories. And now they were dead and I was alive, not because I was more righteous, just quicker and sneakier. More savage.

  But I had saved two lives last night. Two people who would certainly have died without my aid. Did that balance the scales? Was I fated to both giveth and taketh away? If I did as much harm as good, what was the point of continuing this vagabond existence?

  A young woman placed a plate of food and a mug of tea before me, breaking my thoughts.

  “Here you are, good sir,” she said. She hovered a moment. I looked up at her. “I couldn’t help overhearing how you saved us all. It sounds terrifying. Alone in the forest with all those Indians and Frenchmen.”

  I looked at the young woman, from her loose golden curls, her blue eyes, wide and shining with excitement, her lips parted and her breathing quick, to the firm, young curves that her modest, God-fearing dress couldn’t quite hide. She gave a little shiver of guilty pleasure at the idea of danger close but not too close.

  “Would it be too forward of me to ask you about it?” She chewed her lip as she awaited my reply.

  I took a sip of tea, then turned to face her, putting on my roguish smile.

  “So, there I was...”

  More adventures with Patrick Leclerc’s immortal healer can be found in the urban fantasy novel OUT OF NOWHERE and the historical fantasy short stories ADVANCING ON PARIS and A MATTER OF HONOR.

  About the Author

  THE DAY AFTER PATRICK LECLERC GRADUATED from high school, he was standing at a terrified approximation of attention while a Drill Instructor roared at him in the sweltering heat of the United States Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, SC, and the sand fleas tried to chew their way to his soul. This might be considered the first in a series of hasty life decisions.

  Today, he makes good use of his history degree by working as a paramedic for an ever-changing parade of ambulance companies in the Northern suburbs of Boston. When not writing he enjoys cooking, fencing, brewing his own beer, and making witty, insightful remarks with career-limiting candor.

  In the lulls between runs on the ambulance—and sometimes the lulls between employment at various ambulance companies—he writes fiction.

  You can find more of it at http://inkandbourbon.com/

  Twitter: https://twitter.com/PatrickLeCler17

  Facebook:

  https://www.facebook.com/patrick.leclerc.5205?hc_location=stream

  Write a Review

  Thank you for taking the time to read my book.

  If you enjoyed this book, please consider writing a review. In this age of digital publishing, honest opinions of readers are invaluable in helping people find new favorite authors. Book lovers are more likely to put their trust in kindred souls than a polished, oily sales pitch. Please, help build our community and bring new readers into the fold. My Amazon Author Page

  Give and Take

  This short story is an early adventure with the protagonist of my novel Out of Nowhere. If you liked the short story, you will probably enjoy the novel. Keep an eye out for more historical shorts in the series. Advancing on Paris and A Matter of Honor should be available soon.

  Thank you again for shipping out with me,

  Patrick LeClerc

  Also Available!

  Novels and Anthologies Available from Firedance Books…

  OUT OF NOWHERE by Patrick LeClerc.

  KINLESS Book One of Two by Stephen Godden.

  TALES OF THE SHONRI: CITY OF LIGHTS by Stephen Godden.

  THE WALKER’S DAUGHTER by Janet Allison Brown.

  STILLNESS DANCING by Jae Erwin.

  EXPECT CIVILIAN CASUALTIES by Gary Bonn.

  THE EVIL AND THE FEAR by Gary Bonn.

  THE FIREDANCE ANTHOLOGY – Words That Burn.

  BROKEN WORLDS Volume One.

  THE BEST OF WRITERLOT Volume One.

  rick LeClerc, In Every Clime and Place

 

 

 


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