Chapter 10
Abigail was quiet as she made her way up the drainpipe and onto the roof. The peak of the roof ran parallel to the front of the building and was gently sloped so she had cover but wasn’t in danger of falling off. She quietly crawled into position and nocked an arrow. She stole a glance over the peak of the roof and saw that the crossbowman looked bored. Her heart was pounding so loudly she was afraid he might hear it. She schooled her breathing and waited, just out of sight.
Alexander stood in the shadows at the back of the alley, which ran forty or fifty feet to the perimeter road between two buildings. It was another twenty feet across the road to the guards. He waited, still as a statue, arrow at the ready with just the slightest tension on the string.
Lucky stood just around the corner, leaning against the building.
Moments ticked by.
Then Alexander heard Jack. “Hey, I brought help.” The slight slur was back in his voice. Alexander couldn’t see him from where he stood but he could picture the wobble in his stride.
The guards were not amused. The sergeant on this side of the wall drew his short sword and called for the guards on the other side of the wall to come through.
Alexander heard Jack protest, “Hey, come on, we just want a chance at the reward is all.”
The sergeant pointed with his blade, “Not a step closer or you’re both going to rot in the guardhouse dungeon.” The rest of his men drew their blades and fanned out across the street. Five men against two.
“Alright already, we didn’t mean nothin’ by it. We just wanted a chance at the reward.” Jack and Anatoly slowed their approach but didn’t stop. “My friend here is real good with his axe. We could work together and split the gold.”
Abigail took a slow, deep breath and held it as she drew her bowstring back to her cheek. She sighted down the shaft just like Anatoly had taught her, just like she’d done countless times in the past. The whole world faded away. It was just Abigail and her target.
She let her arrow fly.
It was a perfect shot. The arrow drove into the guard’s back, straight through his heart and twelve inches out the front of his hardened leather breastplate. He toppled wordlessly off the roof and crashed onto the corner of the awning that covered the raised wooden walkway running along the front of the building. She was up and moving, drawing another arrow along the way.
There was a moment of stillness. An instant before the reality of the attack sank into the five guards. Alexander loosed his arrow into that moment. His target was the squad sergeant. The man stood facing Anatoly and Jack, pointing his sword at them. Alexander sent his arrow into the unarmored place just under the man’s right armpit that was exposed by his raised arm. The sergeant stiffened and his eyes went wide before he slumped to his knees and fell over on his side.
Anatoly had his war axe resting nonchalantly on his shoulder. He took one step toward the guard standing to the left of the dying sergeant, pulled down sharply on the handle of his axe, leveraging it off his shoulder, and flipped the blade over in a high arc with surprising speed. The first three inches of the razor-sharp crescent blade cut into the guard’s forehead down to the bridge of his nose, cleaving the front half of his head in two. Anatoly unceremoniously kicked the man in the chest to free his axe from the bone of his skull before the man could fall.
Only moments had passed. Alexander raced to the front of the alley where it spilled out onto the street. He stopped, standing over the corpse of the crossbowman who only seconds before had stood on the building above, and nocked his second arrow. The three remaining guards had regained their wits. The closest one spotted him and raised his round shield. Alexander calmly adjusted his aim and sent his arrow into the man’s thigh. The guard screamed and collapsed with a thud, writhing around on the ground in agony.
Just as Abigail made it to the front of the roof, she caught motion coming from a rooftop on the other side of the wall. It was the second crossbowman. She threw herself flat on her back as the short but fast crossbow bolt sailed toward her. It sliced across the top of her left shoulder. Had she been standing, the bolt would have caught her square in the left side of her chest.
She slid toward the front of the roof. Her arrow came free and skittered over the edge. She struggled to gain purchase but the shakes came loose under her and she continued to slide.
Anatoly faced the last two guards. Jack circled to the left, and they let him because they were clearly more worried about Anatoly. Anatoly stepped to the right and smashed that guard’s shield with the blade of his axe, rolling around the left side of the man and propelling himself into a tight spin. He finished behind the guard with his crescent-bladed war axe whistling around from the spin, catching him in the back of the neck. The guard’s head came free and spun end over end, trailing lurid streamers of blood, hovering in midair for a moment before it followed the body crashing to the ground in a crimson pool.
The final guard turned to face Anatoly. Jack slipped in and unceremoniously knifed him in the back. He fell forward with a look of surprised shock.
Abigail slipped over the edge of the roof and crashed into the awning. It broke her fall only partially as it gave way under the sudden load. She hit the ground hard amidst a shower of roofing shakes and splintered awning.
Alexander, seeing that the immediate threat had been eliminated, went to his sister. “Abby, are you okay?” he asked urgently, kneeling beside her.
She tested her limbs to make sure nothing was broken and nodded tightly. Blood soaked through her tunic at her shoulder.
Lucky rushed up, knelt alongside Alexander and began fishing around in his bag. “Lie still and let me tend to your shoulder. Can you move your legs? Does anything feel broken?” He was all business.
She shook her head slightly and gritted her teeth through the pain. “Crossbow on the roof,” she gasped in pain when Lucky went to work on her wound, “other side of the wall,” she managed through clenched teeth.
Lucky looked up at Alexander. “Go, I’ll take care of her.”
Alexander gave her hand a squeeze, then turned and shouted to Anatoly, “Crossbow on the roof.” Anatoly stopped short before going through the wall. Alexander and Jack came up alongside him.
“Alexander, follow me through with your bow ready.”
Anatoly was a soldier at heart. He was in his element. He picked up the corpse of the sergeant and slung a shield across the dead man’s chest. Holding the man in front of himself, he went through the crack in the wall. The crossbow bolt drove clean through the shield, through the sergeant’s leather breastplate, through his body and three inches out his back. Anatoly tossed the body to the ground and spun out of the breach to give Alexander a clear shot.
He didn’t waste it. The crossbowman was reloading. Alexander’s arrow caught him in the chest and drove through him clear to the feathers. The guard staggered back a step before toppling over backwards.
The battle had taken only seconds. A handful of people stood looking at the spectacle in shock and amazement. Moments later Lucky and Jack helped Abigail through the breach in the wall and they started moving into the poorer neighborhoods surrounding the Southport city wall. They made their way quickly but quietly through the shantytown that sprawled out onto the plains north of the city, avoiding contact with others as much as possible. The few people who did cross their path took one look at Anatoly and his bloody war axe and looked the other way.
Abigail recovered quickly and was moving on her own in no time. The bandage on her shoulder soaked through but it looked like the bleeding had stopped.
Jack led them in a winding path through the maze of haphazard houses until they reached the edge of town.
“The farmhouse is just over that rise,” Jack pointed at a small hill that rose up out of the fertile farmlands that gave Southport its purpose. “If we skirt the hill on that side we should be able to make it there unnoticed.”
Alexander looked around. They hadn’t drawn any attention and it didn’
t look like they’d been followed. He nodded and they moved out away from the protection of the city’s concealment.
Alexander felt naked out in the open, vulnerable. If they were spotted by the wrong people before they made it to the farmhouse, they were in trouble. They rushed across the seemingly vast expanse of farmland, looking behind them for signs of pursuit but saw none. It looked like the city guard had lost their trail.
Minutes later they reached the safety of the little farmhouse. It was a simple house made from rough-cut timber with a shake roof and a broad, covered porch. Not far from the house, set close to the hillock that sheltered the cozy little estate, was a sturdy-looking barn with a stable and fenced paddock. There were half a dozen healthy-looking horses grazing lazily in the afternoon sun.
Under different circumstances it would have been almost idyllic. Before the events of the past week, Alexander had always pictured himself living in a simple farmhouse like this one. He had no desire to be Master of Valentine Manor. That had always been Darius’s destiny. His brother was the rightful heir, and he’d relished the role. Now he was gone. So many things changed that day.
Alexander pulled his thoughts back to the present when a short, stocky fellow came out of the house and onto the porch. He wore the simple clothes of a farmer. His broad shoulders looked to be a match for any job you might find out on the open range. He scanned the group approaching and, seeing Jack, raised a hand in greeting. He looked about ready to call out a greeting but a quick gesture from the Master Bard silenced him. He waited patiently as they came onto the porch.
Jack led the way. “Owen, it’s good to see you. We have guests. May I present Lord Alexander Valentine.” Owen bowed formally. “His sister, Lady Abigail Valentine; Master-at-Arms, Anatoly Grace; and Master Alchemist, Aluicious Alabrand.” Jack indicated each in turn. “This is my trusted apprentice Owen. He’s been minding the house for me.”
Owen smiled broadly. He had a simple, forthright nature about him and looked entirely comfortable in his own skin. Alexander let his focus slip so he could see Owen’s colors. His aura was about as honest and innocent as Alexander had ever seen.
“It’s an honor to meet you. Please come in. I have stew on the stove and a kettle of hot cider waiting.” Owen opened the stout door and took up the familiar role of host.
The beef stew was simple but hearty. Owen had a sheet pan of biscuits and a lump of rich yellow butter to go with it. Alexander couldn’t remember the last time a meal had been so satisfying. He was warm, his belly was full, and he felt safe for the first time in a week.
He sat in a comfortable chair near the warm stove with a mug of hot cider. He took time to simply savor the moment. The events of the past week danced at the edges of his awareness and the danger they represented only served to heighten the value he placed on the simple pleasures of warmth and safety.
Owen and Jack were busy clearing away the dishes from the meal and cleaning the little kitchen. Abigail had taken refuge in a large overstuffed chair that threatened to swallow her slight frame while she nursed a large mug of hot cider. Lucky was comfortably sprawled out on one of the two couches that framed the low table in the middle of the sitting room and was already snoring gently. Anatoly was the only one not taking the opportunity to relax. He stood at the window, scrutinizing the empty fields that lay beyond.
Alexander smiled. He thought of his parents. His father was fond of afternoon naps. Most days after lunch, Duncan Valentine could be found in his reading room, dozing in his favorite chair. His mother played at being his guardian, keeping the noisy children from disturbing her husband while he slept.
He realized just how much he had taken the simple treasures of his childhood and family life for granted. The love, guidance, and protection of his parents had just always been there like they were a natural part of the world, as dependable as gravity and as predictable as the sunrise. He swallowed the lump growing in his throat, sat up a bit straighter and took a deep breath to clear his head.
Owen and Jack finished up in the kitchen and came to sit on the couch opposite Lucky. The sun hadn’t set but the light of day was beginning to fade. It would be dark soon and they had a long way to travel in the coming days. Alexander decided that he had some questions.
Thinblade (Sovereign of the Seven Isles: Book One) Page 11