The Grave Thief: Book Three of The Twilight Reign (24 page)

‘You want to visit the witch at this hour?’
‘I am plagued by questions and I believe she understands the nature of the Land better than any other I trust with my thoughts.’
‘It’s a bit late for social calls, isn’t it?’ Vesna pulled his fox-lined cape tighter about his body and suppressed a shiver. The cold prickled sharply on his face and rubbing his cheeks with the palms of his gloves only increased his discomfort.
Mihn shrugged. ‘She will not complain; it is her purpose in life to be there when others need her help.’ He nudged his horse in the right direction.
As he passed Vesna, the count saw rare uncertainty on Mihn’s face and reminded himself that the failed Harlequin had been alone since being cast out of his tribe. It would be hard for him to take any sort of advice from others.
‘Thank you, for bringing me out this way. I- I’ve not really left the Palace since returning. I think- It appears I fell out of the habit of enjoying myself quite a while ago.’ A flicker of embarrassment showed in Mihn’s eyes.
Vesna smiled. ‘It’s considered something of a speciality of mine, so there’ll be other opportunities. Go on - but be quick; it might be her lot in life to help those who need it, but Ehla still strikes me as a bad woman to annoy and it’s late enough already.’
Mihn gave him a weak grin and trotted away, leaving the count sitting alone in the middle of the street.
‘Here’s a sorry state of affairs,’ Vesna muttered. ‘A man with my reputation, out in the cold and off to a brothel by himself. I’ll probably find the rest of them stopped off somewhere else and my best chance of company tonight will be in Death’s Gardens!’
Reaching the end of the road he took the right-hand of a fork and, out of habit, looked all around to check for threats. Aside from the lights of the College of Magic, there were scant traces of life from the city, which was already barricaded against the pitiless winter to come. Within the walls, family life would continue as normal, he knew, but as he caught sight of one of the towers on the city wall, Vesna felt particularly aware of Mihn’s absence.
So, it’s not just Lord Isak who finds the man a comfort to have around
, Vensa joked to himself, forcing a grin onto his face.
He left Hamble Lanes behind. In this poorer district the buildings were, perversely, larger, housing many families rather than one. The grim stone blocks were built around a courtyard, which provided winter homes for all sorts of travellers, including the wagon-train Isak had once belonged to. The young white-eye wouldn’t have merited a space inside during the winter; most likely he’d been sent to the stables, where he’d have to rely on livestock to provide warmth rather than a communal fire.
The clink of metal on stone woke him from his thoughts. His head snapped around and he began to scan the shadows for movement.
Damn, this is as good a place as any for an ambush
. He still couldn’t see anyone else abroad, but he tightened his grip on the crossbow and urged his horse into a brisk trot.
Am I imagining things? I’m sure we weren’t followed from the palace
. He was just about to give up and laugh at himself when a sudden scuffle of feet came from the same direction as the earlier sound. Vesna didn’t wait to hear any more but slammed his spurs into the hunter’s flanks and leaned low over its neck as the horse jerked forward into a gallop.
The road here was just packed dirt, but the sound of racing hooves was enough to shatter the silence. In response Vesna heard a shout from behind him. He’d been right. He urged the horse to go faster, while trying to spot anyone ahead of him - if this was an ambush, he might not be out of the trap yet, and while he was not much of a shot from horseback, it might prove a deterrent for anyone—
He never got the chance. A blur flashed in from his left and slammed into his horse’s neck. Vesna barely had time to register it was an arrow as the horse screamed and staggered a few steps before crashing to the ground. Vesna jumped from the saddle, throwing himself clear of the falling beast. His left shoulder smashed into the ground and he sprawled heavily on his back, lights bursting in his head as it slammed backwards.
Blinking, Vesna stared up at the night sky for some few seconds, too stunned to move. From there he could see a great swathe of stars and the greater moon, Alterr, with a strip of cloud across her. As his senses returned he heard running feet and shouting: three figures closing on him fast, a large man in the centre carrying a bow.
Piss and daemons
, Vesna thought, flapping at his chest for a moment before finding his sword.
No, where’s the bow?
He looked left and right, gasping as he realised he’d cut the back of his head. The crossbow lay only a yard away, still cocked. The quarrel had fallen out of the groove, but it was beside the bow and would take only a moment to replace.
The man in the centre realised what he was doing and slowed, reaching for another arrow, but by then the three were barely twenty yards away. Vesna, dazed as he was, managed to get to one knee and level the crossbow. He pulled the trigger and saw the big man fall with a cry, then threw the now-useless weapon at the other two, who’d faltered as their comrade went down. One looked back down the road; the other hopped out of the way as the crossbow clattered over the ground towards him, his eyes widening as he looked up to see Vesna charging towards them, pulling his sword from its scabbard as he ran.
He closed the ground so quickly he’d barely freed the blade by the time he reached them. Both men carried six-foot spears, but neither looked ready to use them. Vesna smashed one man’s spear aside, moving inside its reach to cut down through the man’s arm, then he swung back with the pommel and smashed it across the man’s face. He fell sprawling into his comrade, buying Vesna enough time to lunge like a fencer, plunging his sword into the second’s heart, then withdrawing and stabbing down into the first before the second had even fallen.
He looked over at the big man. The quarrel had taken him just above the hip; he was writhing in agony and screaming rather than retrieving his weapon. Satisfied he was in no danger from that quarter, Vesna looked for the rest of the gang—
There they were, a second, significantly larger, group of men.
‘Piss and daemons, I’m dead,’ Vesna growled.
He raised his left arm gingerly and worked his shoulder around a little. It was sore, but nothing worse.
‘Weapons,’ he ordered himself, letting the professional soldier take over his thoughts. Five yards away was the archer, with his bow right beside him, so he grabbed a spear and went to fetch that. To give the big man something to think about Vesna kicked his hip before retrieving the bow. He realised he only had time for one shot and rushed it, the arrow skewing high of its target and barely stalling them as they ducked.
Vesna hefted his plundered spear. The men on the floor were dressed as penitents, he now saw; most likely mercenaries.
Better than zealots
, he thought as he raised the spear,
but not much.
He waited until they were no more than a dozen paces away before hurling the spear. The lead man had been expecting it and dodged, but the man behind him was caught in the thigh and went down yelling. Without any more time Vesna transferred his broadsword to his right hand and drew his duelling dagger, moving clear of the bodies on the ground. The weapon afforded him little in terms of range but the steel guard extended down over his fist and could be used to deflect a blade.
Time to play the only card I’ve got left
. ‘Do you know who I am?’ he yelled at the top of his voice.
The group slowed to a trot with the lead man indicating for them to fan out around. This close he could see they wore the grey robes of the cult of Death rather than the black of penitents of Nartis.
Shit, both cults are involved, and these ones will be tougher
.
They carried an assortment of swords and axes and looked like they knew how to use them. It was a strange thing to be cheered by, but warfare wasn’t as sophisticated as duelling. Spearmen would have simply closed in and spitted him like a boar; these mercenaries would swing their weapons in ways he could predict and he was sure none had his skill.
‘Aye, we know you, and we’re goin’ to kill you.’ It was a Farlan accent, from the north, which made it less likely they were simple mercenaries out for the highest price.
Vesna turned in a slow circle, not bothering to keep his eyes on the leader. There were twelve in total, more odds than he’d ever faced before.
One at a time
, said the memory of a past weapons teacher, a man who’d taught him the value of a kick to the crotch on the first day.
Move when they don’t expect, kill one and move.
‘Then you know my lord,’ he said, edging closer to one man in the ring. ‘Whatever you’re being paid, we will double, treble even.’
The man gave a heartless laugh. ‘And get me a knighthood too, I’m sure.’
‘It can be arranged. You’ll have information we need.’
‘Sorry, friend, it don’t work like that.’
Vesna kept turning, sword extended, while the others watched him. He was moving in short sharp bursts, not fast enough to get dizzy, but at random, so his back wasn’t turned to anyone for long.
‘How does it work, then? You don’t sound like a fanatic.’
‘Enough of the pleading, I’d hoped for better from—’
Vesna didn’t wait for him to finish but lunged forward at the youngest of the group, the one whose eyes had been darting between the speakers. The boy yelped in surprise as Vesna dodged his axe and rammed his dagger into the boy’s guts. He felt the youth’s breath on his cheek as he held him in place, his eyes on the next man in the circle. He deflected a sword-lunge and spun his own up and around, faster than his opponent could, his enchanted blade lighter through the air, and biting deep into the man’s arm.
The man howled and dropped his sword as Vesna dragged the spitted youth in an arc to block the rest, kicking the wounded man to drive him back into a comrade.
Kill and move
, yelled the voice in his head, and Vesna obeyed.
Pushing off one foot he darted out of the way of two blows, then ran forward into two hasty cuts which he caught on dagger and sword. Swerving left he stepped around one and slashed down the man’s ribs. He ignored the man’s screams and continued moving,
kill and move
, barely getting his sword up in time to deflect a falling axe before taking the opportunity to hammer his pommel into the next man’s face.
Blood squirted down his cheek but Vesna ignored it as he kept up the momentum and pushed past the broken-nosed novice to slash at the next man’s legs. The man hopped back and collided with another mercenary as Vesna rashly followed it up. A sword-tip scraped over his cuirass as the man rode the impact and lunged forward himself.
Vesna felt the sword nick his arm but his training saved him as he pulled his dagger back to his chest and twisted left to pin the sword. Pushing off his left foot he cut up into the man’s armpit and tore his chest open.
Kill and move.
The pinned sword was released as the novice fell so Vesna used the guard of his dagger to flick it at the nearest novice. As that one batted the flying weapon into the ground Vesna turned, aware there were men behind. His fencer’s instincts saved him again as a sword flashed forward and a line of fire cut through his ear and scraped his skull; he stepped forward past his enemy’s hilt and drove his dagger into the man’s side.
Moving like a dancer now, Vesna swung his sword underneath his extended left arm, pivoted and slashed up at the next novice to reach him. Steel rang on steel as the man parried, but Vesna didn’t wait to trade blows, instead using his impaled enemy as a shield. In his haste to wound the hero, the mercenary followed and was caught by a comrade’s mace. As he cried out, the comrade hesitated. Vesna didn’t.
Kill and move.
The novice fell in a heap with the injured man as a roar came from somewhere behind Vesna and he turned, caught a sword stroke on his cuirass and again stepped closer to slash at the man’s hand with his dagger. Instead, he caught the sword blade, but he smashed down onto it with the dagger’s guard and knocked it from his attacker’s grip, then stabbed the unarmed man in the belly.
Now, as men closed in on both sides, he retreated a couple of steps to some clear ground behind where he could see all of his attackers. One man he’d driven back tried to catch him off-guard, delivering a high cut as he attempted to kick Vesna off-balance. Rotating sideways, Vesna caught the cut and stabbed his dagger into the man’s knee in a single movement. A quick twist freed the narrow blade and he took another pace back, drawing in an enormous gasp of air as he at last remembered to breathe. The crippled man toppled over, howling in pain.
Two more advanced towards him: the leader of the group and a tall man brandishing an axe. Behind them, the man with the broken nose was shaking blood from his face, but he still carried his sword. One more was struggling up from underneath the corpse of his comrade.
Time to show off
, Vesna thought, sucking in as much air as he could manage. He tossed his dagger up in the air, transferring his broadsword from right hand to left while the dagger spun through the night. Instinctively the men watched it looping lazily up. This was a duellist’s trick, one that relied on sleight of hand as much as skill to succeed. Vesna swept a low cut through the air between them and the pair instinctively hesitated and lowered their weapons to follow.
Vesna grinned as he felt the dagger slap down into his right palm and he hurled it at the taller man’s unguarded chest. Without arms or axe to avoid, it was an easy throw; it caught him straight in the heart. To his credit the leader didn’t turn as his man gasped and staggered, but it made little difference now that he was alone. Bringing his hands together, Vesna traded two blows before nicking the man’s forearm. The injury only put the leader off balance, but the next cut neatly opened his throat.

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